January 28, 2011
Simple three
(Flower Series)
© Pamir Kiciman 2010

Simple three

(Flower Series)

© Pamir Kiciman 2010

October 8, 2010
The extraordinary in the ordinary

All images © Pamir Kiciman 2010

The definition of the Japanese words wabi sabi has changed over the years. At one time when the Japanese language was young, wabi meant “poverty,” and sabi meant “loneliness.” During the first major flowering of Japanese culture, “wabi” came to refer to the ideal hermit’s life, lived in contemplation of nature and appreciation of the spiritual and aesthetic values underlying a solitary existence. His was a wabi way. The Japanese tea masters of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries developed a wabi style of tea ceremony as an alternative to the ornate and ostentatious ceremony in which the aristocracy would show off their valuable tea objects and forge political alliances. “Sabi” was refined over the years to emphasize a state of receptivity, fostered in remote natural settings. This positive aloneness was joined to the wabi appreciation of the understated and unrefined to form a phrase with deep resonance for the contemplative mind. People would dream of living in simple enlightened appreciation of nature.

— Richard Powell

This is actually duckweed so thick it took on an eerie desert-like appearance in certain light, and the ducks swimming in it barely broke the continuity.


October 3, 2010
Made for wind and wabi-sabi

I’m often humbled by what is present in a seemingly ordinary tract of land; this in the middle of an urban environment. Thus a little wabi-sabi today. First an image.

To credit the quotes I included, I have to link to the PDF they’re from, as I wasn’t able to locate the author.

The primary aesthetic concept at the heart of traditional Japanese culture is the value of harmony in all things. The Japanese world view is nature-based and concerned with the beauty of studied simplicity and harmony with nature. These ideas are still expressed in every aspect of daily life, despite the many changes brought about by the westernization of Japanese culture. This Japanese aesthetic of the beauty of simplicity and harmony is called wabi-sabi (wah-bee sah-bee).

Wabi-sabi is a beauty of things imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete. It is the beauty of things modest and humble. It is the beauty of things unconventional. The concepts of wabi-sabi correlate with the concepts of Zen Buddhism, as the first Japanese involved with wabi-sabi were tea masters, priests, and monks who practiced Zen.

© Pamir Kiciman 2010

Material characteristics of wabi-sabi:
Suggestion of natural process
Irregular
Intimate
Unpretentious
Earthy
Simple

September 25, 2010
"To find the universal elements enough; to find the air and the water exhilarating; to be refreshed by a morning walk or an evening saunter; to be thrilled by the stars at night; to be elated over a bird’s nest or a wildflower in spring - these are some of the rewards of the simple life."

— John Burroughs