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Golden Tea Room, in the MOA Museum of Art, Atami. The Golden Tea Room (黄金の茶室, Ōgon no chashitsu) was a portable gilded chashitsu (tea room) constructed during the late 16th century Azuchi–Momoyama period for the Japanese regent Lord Toyotomi Hideyoshi's tea ceremonies. The original Golden Tea Room is lost, but a number of ...
The Golden Tea Room (MOA Museum of Art) The Golden Tea Room (黄金の茶室, Ōgon no chashitsu) was a portable gilded chashitsu constructed during the 16th century Azuchi–Momoyama period for the Japanese regent Lord Toyotomi Hideyoshi's tea ceremonies. The original room is lost, but a number of reconstructions have been made.
He was the nephew of Katagiri Katsumoto and tea instructor to the fourth Shogun, Tokugawa Ietsuna, so his style became popular among the feudal ruling class of Japan at the time. Jikō-in was constructed in 1663 as the bodaiji memorial temple for his father, Katagiri Sadataka, and the 185th abbot of Daitoku-ji was its founding priest.
Tai-an (待庵) is a Momoyama period chashitsu (Japanese tea house) located at Myōki-an temple in Yamazaki, Kyoto. Tai-an was designed by the great tea master Sen no Rikyū in 1582. Sen no Rikyū was named the tea master of Toyotomi Hideyoshi that same year, following Oda Nobunaga 's death, [ 1 ] and as Hideyoshi was battling around the area ...
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Mizuya (水屋, "water room") is the term for the preparation area in a Japanese tea house (chashitsu) or attached to any venue used for the Japanese tea ceremony. For instance, the area used for preparation during outdoor tea ceremonies is also called the mizuya.
Jo-an tea house dating to the 17th century, a National Treasure of Japan Jo-an ( 如庵 ) is a seventeenth-century Japanese teahouse ( chashitsu ) located in Inuyama , Aichi Prefecture . Jo-an is said to be one of the three finest teahouses in Japan and has been in its current location in Inuyama since 1972.
The chashitsu also included a waiting hall (machiai) and a mizuya. [6] When finished, one of the brothers to the emperor of Japan at the time, Prince Chichibu, inspected the building during a ceremony in Tokyo on March 20, 1935, together with his wife, and the prince gave it the name Zui-Ki-Tei (瑞暉 亭). [7] The name has two meanings.