A rustic earthiness that is the ultimate in elegant simplicity (20030110)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
55 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Cultural fusion at its garbled worst.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Wabi Sabi Style (Hardcover)
As a student of Japanese culture, this book depressed me. The contents bear no more relation to the true spirit of "wabi" and "sabi" than does a chrome Sony Diskman. The book's core sensibility is mediocre, middle-American interior design thinly coated with a layer of Japanese cliches. What made me very sad was the complete misuse/misundertanding of the important aesthetic terms "wabi" and "sabi." The tipoff is in the title. Wabi and sabi can never be a "style" in the Martha Stewart home decorating sense. (Although I'm sure Martha Stewart would have at least made a beautiful, if not intellectually honest, book.) Wabi-sabi is NOT a style or, as the authors maintain, something akin to feng shui. This book is an example of cultural fusion at its worst. Not recommended.
31 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Much appreciation to the authors!!!,
By Kevin Lekeleher (Montreal, QC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wabi Sabi Style (Hardcover)
Much appreciation to the authors for bringing Wabi Sabi to the masses. In doing so they have rescued Wabi Sabi from the pretentious "WABI SNOBBY" pseudo intellectuals.here is a sampling of a few jewels found in the text of Wabi Sabi Style; "To ennoble the ignoble" "Moving beyond the glossy, gilded, and gaudy - the simple organic elegance of wabi sabi is for those who have no need to prove who they are. Wabi Sabi is for those who are at peace with themselves and want to feel the peace of the world around them at all times." "In order to understand wabi sabi, beauty must first be understood on a conceptual level. The traditional Japanese concept of beauty differs radically from that of the West. The Japanese have long held the notion that beauty is not inherent in an object but rather is experiential. Given an order set of circumstances, beauty is the elicited response experienced by the perceiver." I am an admirer of Leonard Koren's writing on wabi sabi, but it is apparent that there are those who make the unfortunate mistake of comparing the Crowley's work with Koren's. As Confucius has told us "comparisons are odious" Even the work of Lennox Tierney deserves recognition. The Japanese know that "there are many paths to reach the top of Mount Fuji" It is apparent that there are those who deem themselves the guru's and sensei's of a fabricated "wabi sabi movement or school" these individuals or groups are in direct opposition to the spirit of wabi sabi . Let us all remember Koren's wabi sabi universe, under "Moral Precepts" and "focus on the intrinsic and ignore material hierarchy." Thank you to Koren, Tierney, and the Crowley's for bringing the values found in wabi sabi to the west.
40 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Dumbing down wabi-sabi.,
By "fishman@egroups.com" (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wabi Sabi Style (Hardcover)
Will "wabi-sabi" become the new buzzword among corporate retailers and mall mongers? That seems to be the authors' intention. They attempt to transform an elegant and rarified sense of beauty into corporate easy speak: high bulk, low content. The authors' flawed methodology is to take a mishmash of things Japanese and, by association, assume it's wabi-sabi. They haven't done their homework.
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