Kintsugi is the practice of repairing broken objects, highlighting the cracks with gold.
Kintsugi is the practice of repairing broken objects, highlighting the cracks with gold. Bringing forward the narrative and serving to honor impermanence. Kintsugi is used as an analogy for people to practice resilience. Transform and recover from past experiences. It can serve as an analogy for the duality of life, life's tendency to be incredibly beautiful and challenging simultaneously.
Wabi Sabi is the ancient Japanese art philosophy of finding value in imperfection, impermanence, and incompleteness. It invites a new perspective, drawing on ancient Zen truths like non-attachment, impermanence, and awareness. It's about finding beauty in the insignificant and unconventional, finding value in impermanence. It's also about drawing inspiration from the incomplete.
In this intimate workshop, we'll learn the centuries-old Japanese art philosophy Wabi Sabi and reflect on thought-provoking questions.
What to expect
- 30 minutes: we drink tea and introduce ourselves
- After drinking our tea, we break the cups we drink from
- 60 minutes: we prepare our pieces to be repaired
- 30 minutes: we repair the pieces
- 60 minutes: we add the gold
What you'll need
- Clothes you don't mind getting dirty
- We provide cups, but you can bring your own piece from home if you want. Bring only glazed clay pieces because unglazed pieces are difficult to work with.
- Your open minds
- If you are hosting at the office, you will need enough table seating for everyone and hot water for tea.
If you would like to have a class at the studio instead of your office, please book between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m.