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About the Author

Andrew Juniper runs the Wabi Sabi Design Company in the South of England and also translates for UK and Japanese government bodies.

Works by Andrew Juniper

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6 reviews
This is an excellent book. It is an excellent companion to Leonard Koren's book. In this book, Andrew Juniper starts by giving us a superb historical context. He also related Wabi-Sabi to the original philosophy of Tao.

From there, he went on to the spiritual concepts and then on to design.

He ended the book well, by giving us an example of an old African shawl, stating that the African embodied the philosophy of Wabi-Sabi more than some modern Japanese do.

Overall, an excellent book that show more weaves the practical with the spiritual, and some warnings. show less
Found when searching for a children's book about a cat (both of same name) recommended by a dear friend who is a watercolorist. This turned out to be the book I'd been looking for for years regarding what I'd been calling, as a writer, "a discipline of indiscipline." My friend had never heard of the concept either, and when I showed her this book, she asked for her own copy. It has created a special bond between us, crossing generations, spiritual practice, and artistic media.
http://pixxiefishbooks.blogspot.com/2...

For most people, what jumps to mind when they think of the Japanese aesthetic is 'all things Zen'. Well, Andrew Juniper has gone beyond Zen and provided an introduction to wabi sabi. From the back of the book:

Wabi sabi describes a traditional Japanese aesthetic sensibility based on an appreciation of the transient beauty of the physical world. It embodies the melancholic appeal of the impermanence of all things - especially the modest, the rustic, the show more imperfect, and even the decayed. With its focus on the delicate subtleties, objects, effects, and environments of the natural world, wabi sabi promotes an alternative approach to the appreciation of both beauty and life itself.

I'm a librarian so probably not even supposed to admit to thoughts like this, but if there was ever a book I didn't want to return to the library and wanted to keep for myself, this book is it. (But I'll be good and bring it back!) I will just have to find my own copy to have and to hold. There are beautiful images, philosophies and ideas that combine to make this a great book. I don't think I can review it any better than that.
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Really wanted to like this book as it is a topic that truly interests me, but didn't like the writing style. I gave up part way through the writing about the tea ceremony. I might come back to it in the future.

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Works
2
Members
254
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#90,186
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
6
ISBNs
6
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3

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