February 1, 2007: An Obey Piece on the Corner of Renwick and Canal

Where the mood of the moment is solitary and quiet it is called sabi. When the artist is feeling depressed or sad, and in this peculiar emptiness of feeling catches a glimpse of something rather ordinary and unpretentious in its incredible "suchness," the mood is called wabi. When the moment evokes a more intense, nostalgic sadness, connected with autumn and the vanishing away of the world, it is called aware. And when the vision is the sudden perception of something mysterious and strange, hinting at an unknown never to be discovered, the mood is called yugen. These extremely untranslatable Japanese words denote the four basic moods of furyu, that is, of the general atmosphere of Zen "taste" in its perception of the aimless moments of life. --Alan Watts, The Way of Zen, 1957.
Unrelated: I have the cover of The L Magazine this week. It's the love issue!
Comments
Nice work on the L cover, that is a cool magazine. Good photo.
Which is this photo for you Jake?
Maybe Zen spirit is in all street art. Being aware allows us to see beauty where it is. Not everyone wants to be aware.
Watts taught in Mpls. in the 60s. He also had a television program every week called "Eastern thought and the Western Mind". It taught me most of what I needed to know.
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