This powerful process of seeing and naming created the tea-leaf storage jar named Chigusa. It transformed an imported Chinese jar from a practical container into a vessel worthy of display, ornament and contemplation, although its practicality did not cease to be important. Remarkably, diaries kept by 16th-century tea participants record in great detail what they admired when viewing Chigusa. The diaries allow us to see the jar through the eyes of these tea men.
According to the tea diaries, when Chigusa was displayed for guests in the tearoom, it was dressed in ornamental silks of specified types—a mouth cover made of antique Chinese fabric and a net bag that enclosed the jar’s body. In later periods, sets of thick silk cords were added. These high-quality accessories were chosen to honor Chigusa’s prominent status.
The exhibition “Chigusa and the Art of Tea” is at the Smithsonian’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery through July 27, 2014.
For more information and a slideshow about “Chigusa and the Art of Tea,” click here.