|

True Emptiness on the Chicago River

|
The transparent
tea house known as "True Emptiness" grew out of a desire
to allow people to see through the walls of a traditional tea hut
and view the intimacy of the Japanese tea ceremony taking place
within. Creating this structure has taken me literally on the ride
of a lifetime floating under the bridges and skyscraper canyons
along the Chicago River. At sunrise on a crisp autumn morning, like
a leaf fallen from a tree and landing on the river, True Emptiness
floated with the current while host and guests shared a simple bowl
of tea.
This simple and humble piece of architecture has
brought more interest and notoriety than anything I have done.
Made entirely of the most common of materials, PVC piping, it
is completely transportable, travels on airplanes disassembled
in "tea bags", and assembles in 30 minutes. It is a
precise replica of the bones of the most famous tea house in Japan,
the national treasure known as Yuin, located in Kyoto.
As may be expected of such a novel structure,
it has been met with some controversy by purists used to seeing
tea houses made of mud and clay and bamboo with thatched roofs.
My position is that these traditional huts were built using the
everyday materials available to tea masters during their unique
and historic time and place. Their genius was to take these mundane
and ordinary materials and transform them into extraordinary spaces.
Concrete, glass, steel, tin, canvas, and yes, PVC piping, are
the ordinary materials of our contemporary world. Using ordinary
PVC piping in this way provides the uncanny twist with the mundane
that breaths life into Tea and in my view keeps the tradition
of tea architecture truly alive.
Tea societies teaching the traditional Japanese
tea procedure have invited me to do talks and presentations on
tea hut architecture in conjunction with demonstrating the beauty
and intimacy of the ceremony within True Emptiness. True Emptiness
and I have been invited to The Parliament of The World's Religions,
The American Institute of Architects and International Association
of Architects conventions. True Emptiness was installed in The
California Museum of Art. Images of True Emptiness have been featured
in books and publications in Japan, Europe and the U.S.
|