8.
Destruction is creation: Ha
There is another aesthetic approach that
exists side by side with the approach that emerged
from this way of living in which people are prepared
to entrust their lives to the flow of nature. This
other approach is based on the belief that creativity
becomes possible precisely by resisting and destroying
existing concepts and preconceptions that people have
previously created. The aesthetic concept of ha (gdestructionh)
has invigorated and revitalized the other Japanese
aesthetic that I have described here.
The idea of ha as it appears in the tripartite concepts
jo-ha-kyu and shu-ha-ri is a revolutionary one. In
this context it is considered to be a device that
interrupts (destroys) the current flow and permits
a major leap forward.
The idea is that life forces are stimulated by defiance
and are realized precisely through the process of
destruction.
Catastrophe is a vital force which comes into being
at the moment of destruction, and the idea that it
was destruction itself that constituted the essence
of beauty was present in the sukiya tea huts created
by Sen no Rikyu in the middle of the 16th century.
The idea of displacing modules, copying the image
of a ramshackle cottage, and using the most basic
and elementary materials and forms of expression constituted
a form of resistance to the military samurai class,
who placed importance on extravagance and order.
Ha might be described as a kind of life-inducing
device that lurks behind Japanese ways of thought.
(Jo-ha-kyu and shu-ha-ri: The aesthetic concept of
jo-ha-kyu is the principle of acceleration used in
Gagaku and other forms of Japanese traditional music.
Shu-ha-kyu denotes the three-stage principle underlying
traditional study methods whereby the student initially
adheres to the knowledge he acquires from his teacher
and then discovers himself by breaking away from this
knowledge and creating his own unique world.)
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The sukiya was a message of revolt
directed by the merchant Sen no Rikyu against
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who stood at the pinnacle
of the military class. This destructive message
directed against the ruling class resulted in
the establishment of one of the key aspects of
the Japanese aesthetic. |
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Cherry blossoms are manifestations
of the Japanese aesthetic not at the moment they
come into full bloom but when they begin to fall.
The vicissitudes of nature symbolize death and,
at the same time, the advent of a new season. |
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A chair designed by Shiro Kuramata.
One senses the designerfs strongly destructive
intent, which suggests revolt against the very
nature of being. |