
About this Event
to get the best experience. On the day of the event, join the standby line for remaining seats. Seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis for patrons without tickets.
Tea will not be served to audience members during this presentation.
Witness a public presentation of a traditional Japanese practice of tea preparation called chanoyu, featuring tea utensils from the museum’s collection. Chanoyu is the comprehensive and quintessential expression of traditional Japanese art and lifestyle. It is all about the host entertaining guests with a bowl of tea prepared with utmost care. The procedure has been refined to an ultimate sophistication, infused with Wabi aesthetics and Zen spirituality.
This event celebrates the fifteenth anniversary of the Eastern Region USA chapter of the Omotesenke Domonkai, the association of practitioners following the tradition of Omotesenke Fushin-an in Kyoto, Japan. For this festive occasion, the local DC representatives have selected tea utensils from our Kinsey Chanoyu Collection to prepare matcha in the Omotesenke tradition. The Kinsey Chanoyu Collection comprises nearly two hundred objects that former NMAA trustee Gregory Kinsey gifted the museum for the express purpose of public education on Japanese tea practice.
Image: Tea bowl, Sakakura Shinbei XII (1881-1960), Fukawa Yumoto, Nagato city, Yamaguchi prefecture, Japan, 1960, Stoneware, ash glaze, Freer Study Collection, FSC-P-6983a-h.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Meyer Auditorium, Freer Gallery of Art, Washington, United States
USD 0.00