Teahouse
On View In:
Gallery 225
Artist:   Yasuimoku Komuten Company Ltd.  
Title:   Teahouse  
Date:   2001 (constructed)  
Credit Line:   Gift of the Friends of the Institute, the Mary Livingston Griggs and Mary Griggs Burke Foundation, the Commemorative Association for the Japan World Exposition (1970), the James Ford Bell Foundation, Patricia M. Mitchell, Jane and Thomas Nelson, and many others  
Location:   Gallery 225  

Japan's ruling warrior elite first held lavish tea gatherings in their formal reception halls. As tea masters like Murata Shuko_ (1422-1502), Takeno Jo_o_ (1502-1555) and Sen Rikyu_ (1520-1591) began to advocate the practice of wabi (rustic) tea in the 16th century, separate, specially designed teahouses began to be built. Shuko_ introduced an architectural style called so_an, literally "grass hut." So_an teahouses were small and constructed from humble materials including roughly milled lumber, bamboo, thatch, and earthen walls. In its simplicity, soan teahouses were meant to suggest a monk's retreat in the wilderness. The low entranceway required all participants to humble themselves as they entered the tearoom from the garden. Although a built-in alcove for the display of art was adopted from more formal structures, its size was greatly reduced--sufficient only to display a small painting or simple floral arrangement.

The museum's teahouse is based on the Sa-an, an 18th century teahouse within the Zen monastery of Daitokuji in Kyoto that is now designated as one of Japan's "Important Cultural Properties." A small, carved signboard under the eaves of the museum's teahouse reads "Zenshin-an," Hermitage of the Meditative Heart -- a name bestowed on the structure by Fukushima Keido_, the current abbot of Tofukuji temple in Kyoto.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Yasuimoku Komuten Company Ltd.  
Role:   Maker  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:    
Classification:   Architecture  
Creation Place:   Asia, Japan, , ,  
Accession #:   2001.204.1  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts