New Church Life July/August 2015 | Page 51

    a life of its own, a life no power of the artist or craftsman could give it, no matter how skillfully and carefully he may work. This is part of the thrill and mystery involved in making art. There is a potential for the finished piece to have more in it than the artist put into it. It can be a revelation even to the one who created it. Howard Pyle, a New Church author, artist and teacher of some famous painters, wrote: “Make people feel there is a great deal left unsaid and that you have much more to express . . . That will excite their imaginations and they will see in your work more than you ever knew it contained.” (Diversity In Depth, Wilmington, Delaware, Society of the Fine Arts, 1973, p. 17) Wabi-Sabi Things made by machine, uniform and perfect, are generally less prized, at least aesthetically, than ones made by human hands. Well-worn antiques are viewed as more beautiful than shiny new things. We are drawn to things that are old and worn or rustic. The Japanese have a term (a combination of two terms, really) for this: wabi-sabi. Wabi means harmonious, quiet, humble, simple, in tune with nature. Sabi means old, faded, rusty, weathered, not polished or sophisticated. These qualities have an aesthetic appeal and are highly prized in Japanese arts and crafts. (They are not the only elements of Japanese style, by any means; highly finished lacquered boxes, for instance, are also greatly valued.) There is a hint of melancholy or pang of nostalgia about wabi-sabi because, in this world of time, beauty does not last. And yet, our awareness of how fleeting it is actually makes it all the more affecting. An essential aspect of the beauty of cherry blossoms in the spring, which are so revered in Japan, is that they don’t last long. The very evidence of beauty’s impermanence – the marks of wear and old age that remind us of the transitory nature of earthly things – at the same time gives rise to thoughts of an eternal realm in which it is permanent. A receding tide draws the eye to the same ocean from which the rising tide came and will come again. A fresh young tree blooming in the spring is beautiful; but an ancient, twisted, weather-beaten, half- FVB'&