Among Friends
Japanese Tea Ceramics

June 28, 2019 to March 1, 2020

Japanese tea ceramics are valued by so-called tea people (chajin) for qualities that go far beyond mere utility. When used in the ritualised traditional tea ceremony (chanoyu, literally “hot water for tea”), the individual vessels take on a very personal meaning. Outstanding pieces are even given names by their makers, or more often by their owners. For each tea ceremony, the host tries to select just the right vessels and utensils for the particular occasion, the season and the expected guests. In the exhibition Among Friends: Japanese Tea Ceramics, the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg (MKG) presents over 150 outstanding objects connected with the tea ceremony, including tea bowls (chawan), water jars (mizusashi), vases (hanaire) and tea containers (chaire) representing the foremost Japanese ceramics centres and spanning a timeframe from the sixteenth century to today. A special focus is placed on the personal significance these unique pieces develop for those who own and use them. The point of departure for the show is the friendship between MKG’s founding director, Justus Brinckmann (1843–1915), and the art dealer and collector S. Bing (1838–1905), a relationship that was vital to the development of the collection of Japanese tea ceramics at MKG. Another, modern-day, friendship that plays a role in the exhibition is that between the ceramist Jan Kollwitz (b. 1960) and the author and ceramics collector Christoph Peters (b. 1966). MKG invited the two “tea people” to help design the presentation – integrating works by Kollwitz and pieces from Peters’ collection. Also participating is the Hamburg section of the Urasenke tea school, which has been practicing chanoyu at MKG’s Shōseian Tea House for over 40 years. The members have put together ceramics ensembles for different occasions in order to demonstrate how the individual sets of utensils used to prepare the green powdered matcha tea during a tea gathering enter into a silent dialogue with one another and thereby stimulate conversation among host and guests. A small selection of historical and modern pieces offers visitors the opportunity to touch and experience their surfaces and qualities with their own hands.

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Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg

Steintorplatz
20099 Hamburg
Germany
Phone: +49-40-428134-800 (press contact)