Exploring Wabi-Sabi in Sydney
I've discovered a book written by Leonard Koren, describing the Japanese aesthetic concept of Wabi-Sabi.
http://www.leonardkoren.com/lkwa.html
I'm starting to understand that Wabi-Sabi is a sort of ancient manifesto of how to see and be in the world. It has influence from Zen Buddhism and loves the observation of the imperfection of nature, in it's wane or in it's growth.
According to Leonard Koren here is a summary list that describes the Wabi-Sabi universe:
"Metaphysical Basis: Things are either devolving toward or evolving from, nothing.
Spiritual Values: Truth comes from the observation of nature. Greatness exists in the inconspicuous and overlooked details. Beauty can be coaxed out of ugliness.
State of Mind: Acceptance of the inevitable. Appreciation of the cosmic order.
Moral Precepts: Get rid of all that is unnecessary. Focus on the intrinsic and ignore the material hierarchy.
Material Qualities: The suggestion of natural process. Irregular. Intimate. Unpretentious. Murky. Simple."
A concise and inadequate English translation of the concept without going into the depth of the whole area is the word 'Rustic' according to Koren.
As an exploration of these ideas, I'm going to find examples of Wabi-Sabi in Sydney, where I live and document them here.
There will be a lot of irony here - I'm not taking this too seriously, but I do think that this imperfect position is probably 'Wabi-Sabi'.