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The
art of Japan
is a kind of directly mental expression in physical life.
The Japanese use the vital world very little. Their art is
extremely mentalised; their
life is extremely mentalised. It expresses in detail quite
precise mental formations. Only, in the physical, they have
spontaneously the sense of beauty. For example, a thing one
sees very rarely in Europe but constantly,
daily in Japan:
very simple people, men of the working class or even peasants
go for rest or enjoyment to a place where they can see a beautiful
landscape. This gives them a much greater joy than going to
play cards or indulging in all sorts of distractions as they
do in the countries of Europe. They
are seen in groups at times, going on the roads or sometimes
taking a train or a tram up to a certain point, then walking
to a place from where one gets a beautiful view. Then at this
place there is a small house which fits very well into the
landscape, there is a kind of small platform on which one
can sit: one takes a cup of tea and at the same time sees
the landscape. For them, this is the supreme enjoyment; they
know nothing more pleasant. One can understand this among
artists, educated people, quite learned people, but I am speaking
of people of the most ordinary class, poor people who like
this better than resting or relaxing at home. This is for
them the greatest joy.
And
in that country, for each season there are known sites. For
instance, in autumn leaves become red;
they have large numbers of maple-trees (the leaves of the
maple turn into all the shades of the most vivid red in autumn,
it is absolutely marvellous) so they arrange a place near
a temple for instance, on the top of a hill, and the entire
hill is covered with maples. There is a stairway which climbs
straight up, almost like a ladder, from the base to the top,
and it is so steep that one cannot see what is at the top,
one gets the feeling of a ladder rising to the skies - a stone
stairway, very well made, rising steeply and seeming to lose
itself in the sky - clouds pass, and both the sides of the
hill are covered with maples, and these maples have the most
magnificent colours you could ever imagine. Well, an artist
who goes there will experience an emotion of absolutely exceptional,
marvellous beauty. But one sees very small children, families
even, with a baby on the shoulder, going there in groups.
In autumn they will go there. In spring time they will go
elsewhere.
There
is a garden quite close to Tokyo where irises are grown, a
garden with very tiny rivulets, and along the rivulets, irises
- irises of all possible colours - and it is arranged according
to colour, organised in such a way that on entering one is
dazzled, there is a blaze of colour from all these flowers
standing upright; and there are heaps and heaps of them,
as far as the eye can reach. At another time, just at the
beginning of spring (it is a slightly early spring there),
there are the first cherry-trees. These cherry-trees never
give fruit, they are grown only for
the flowers. They range from white to pink, to a rather vivid
pink. There are long avenues all bordered with cherry-trees,
all
pink; they are huge trees which have turned pink. There are
entire mountains covered with these cherry-trees, and on the
little rivulets bridges have been built which too are all
red: you see these bridge of
red lacquer among all these pink flowers and, be low, a great
river flowing and a mountain which seems to scale the sky,
and they go to this place in springtime.... For each season
there are flowers and for each flower there are gardens.
And
people travel by train as easily as one go from house to house;
they have a small packet like this which they carry; in it
they have a change clothes, that's quite enough for them;
they wear or the feet rope or fibre sandals; when these get
won out they throw them away and take others, for it costs
nothing at all. All their life is like that. They have paper
handkerchiefs, when they have used them the get rid of them,
and so on - they don't burden then selves with anything. When
they go by train, at the station small meals are sold in boxes
(it is quite deal quite neat), small meals in boxes of white
wood wit little chop-sticks for eating; then, as all this
has no value, when one has finished, one puts them aside doesn't
bother about them or encumber oneself. The live like that.
When they have a garden or a part they plant trees, and they
plant them just at the place where, when the tree has grown,
it will create a landscape, will fit into a landscape. And
as they want the tree to have a particular shape, they trim
it, cut it they manage to give it all the shapes they want.
You have trees with fantastic forms; they have cut off the
unnecessary branches, fostered others, contrived things
as they liked. Then you come to a place and you see a house
which seems to be altogether a part of the landscape; it has
exactly the right colour, it is made of the right materials;
it is not like a blow in your face, as are all those European
buildings which spoil the whole landscape. It is just there
where it should be, hidden under the trees; then you see a
creeper and suddenly a wonderful tree: it is there at the
right place, it has the right form. I had everything to learn
in Japan.
For four years, from an artistic point of view, I lived from
wonder to wonder.
And
in the cities, a city like Tokyo, for example, which is the
biggest city in the world, bigger than London, and which extends
far, far (now the houses are modernised, the whole centre
of the city is very unpleasant, but when I was there, it was
still nice), in the outlying parts of the city, those which
are not business quarters, every house has at the most two
storeys and a garden - there is always a garden, there are
always one or two trees which are quite lovely. And then,
if you go for a walk... it is very difficult to find your
way in Tokyo; there are no straight streets with houses on
either side according to the number, and you lose your way
easily. Then you go wandering around - always one wanders
at random in that country - you go wandering and all of a
sudden you turn the corner of a street and come to a kind
of paradise: there are magnificent trees, a temple as beautiful
as everything else, you see nothing of the city any longer,
no more traffic, no tramways; a corner, a corner of trees
with magnificent colours, and it is beautiful, truly beautiful.
You do not know how you have reached
there, you seem to have come by luck. then
you turn, you seek your way, you wander again and go elsewhere.
And some days later you we to come back to this very place, but it is impossible, is
as though it had disappeared. And this is so frequent this
is so true that such stories are often told Japan. Their literature
is full of fairy-lore. They tell you a story in which the
hero comes suddenly to an enchanted
place: he sees fairies, he sees marvellous
beings, he spends exquisite
hours among flown music; all is splendid. The next day he is obliged
to leave; it is the law of the place, he goes away. He tries
to come back, but never does. He can no longer find
the place: it was there, it has disappeared!... And everything in this city, in this country, from beginning to end, gives you
the impression of impermancence the unexpected, the exceptional.
You always cord across things you did not expect; you want to fini them again and they are lost - they have made
something else which is equally charming. From the artistic
point of view, the point of view of beauty, I don't think
there is a country as beautiful as that.
The
Mother
12
April 1950
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