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Art News:


Chigusa Tea Jar 

The Story of Chigusa

A Japanese Tea Jar's 700-Year History

Note: We are postponing the Chigusa webcast until a more appropriate time and meanwhile wish fervently for the safety of all our colleagues in Japan and their families and friends. We thank you for your understanding and will send out an announcement of the new date. Please join us then.

 

The Smithsonian's Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery invite you to participate in a free online workshop. (Date to be determined)  

 

To register, .

 

What can a single jar tell us about how objects acquired history and meaning within Japanese tea culture?  When the Freer Gallery of Art recently acquired a tea-leaf storage jar named Chigusa, the museum became yet another participant in a seven-century-long story, in which a Chinese jar came to Japan and was transformed into a famous and much-admired container for tea leaves, even acquiring a personal name.  Tea masters' diaries and connoisseurs' handbooks described and ranked the jar; successive owners endowed it with Chinese brocades, silk cords, inscriptions, documents, and multiple boxes. Chigusa has been described as a "time capsule"-- an embodiment of the fascinating and complex process by which tea-related objects accrued meaning and value. Only a few hundred such jars with comparable pedigrees survive in Japan, and few are as extensively documented.

 Chigusa Webinar Presenters

Four scholars gathered in Washington recently--in Chigusa's inspiring presence--to consider aspects of the jar's story. In this free online workshop, they will share their thoughts and discoveries, and then engage in discussion with participants. 

 

PRESENTERS

Louise Allison Cort, Curator for Ceramics, Smithsonian's Freer |Sackler

How a Chinese jar became Chigusa; why Chigusa came to the Freer

 

Takeuchi Jun'ichi, Director, Hosokawa Collection-Eisei Bunko

How did tea men look at Chigusa 400 years ago?

 

Andrew Watsky, Professor, Department of Art and Architecture, Princeton University

Chigusa's name(s)

 

Oka Yoshiko, Professor, Faculty of Cultural and Historical Studies, Otemae University

Who owned Chigusa?

 

MORE INFORMATION

A press release about Chigusa can be found in the Freer|Sackler press room.

 

SPONSORS
"The Story of Chigusa" online workshop is generously funded by Toshiba International Foundation

 

Support for Mr. Takeuchi's participation provided by the Japan Society of Boston and Continental Airlines.  

 

Jay and Toshiko Tompkins have supported a forthcoming publication on Chigusa. 

 

Produced by LearningTimes.

 

Click here for registration and participation procedures.

Images: Tea-leaf storage jar, named Chigusa, China, Southern Song or Yuan dynasty, 13th-14th century; Stoneware with iron glaze; height 41.6 cm; Purchase FSC-P-6964. Presenters Takeuchi Jun'ichi, Andrew Watsky, Oka Yoshiko, and Louise Cort with Chigusa.  

Hours

10 AM to 5:30 PM 

Open daily, except December 25

 

Location

1050 Independence Avenue, SW

Washington, DC 20560

Metro: Smithsonian

asia.si.edu / 202.633.1000

Free admission

artsnews@absolutearts.com by publicaffairsasia@si.edu |  
Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery | 1050 Independence Avenue SW | Washington | DC | 20013



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