Mari Omari - another artist interested in the use of tea bags as material to create sculptural forms. She expresses very eloquently how the tea bag has resonance with everyday life yet simultaneously, through the staining, connotes specific memories.
mari omori
artist's statement: 2006
sourced from
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Tea is more than a beverage. Serving and
receiving tea is an artform deeply rooted in the customs and traditions of
many world cultures.
Since 1997, I have been collecting hundreds
of used teabags to construct sculptural forms and create large-scale room
installations.
The use of tea stain as a medium and the use
of teabags as raw material provide endless possibilities for me as I explore
my identity,
memory and the notion of time. I am a
Japanese-born artist living and working in south Texas since 1992.
Drinking tea is a centuries-old daily ritual
that plays many roles in daily life: to start a day, to greet guests, and in
my culture its purpose is
also
to cleanse one's soul and body. Tea has been given as a gift to celebrate and
bestow a healthy long life. My interest surrounding tea is
the time-shared, mutual respect between host
and guest, and memories of the moment as an event. I am interested in how
these moments are prepared; how each person comes together to connect with
one another. I have begun recording these events that have taken place at my
home,
at restaurants, artist studios, or at
airports-wherever and whenever I have been a witness to tea-centered events.
Although I am from Japan, I have lived in
America long enough that my identity and my notion of home have been
obscured. Since 'home' is something of an imaginary place for me, it has
become a significant force in my work as I explore its shape with
manipulation of materials. I work here with hundreds of brewed and then dried
teabags. Each opened teabag, devoid of tea, has a distinguishing stain, an
imprint that evokes multiple images; at times it appears to be a distant
forest, and another time it resembles the shroud of Turin. As my hands quilt
the bags, my mind moves in a journey through time and space. Gradually, a
shape silently emerges from the thousands of layered and stitched teabags--an
image, perhaps, of a house existing neither in real time nor space, or of a
ship leaving one place to return to another.
Lately, I have been intrigued by the
process, which involves not only collecting tea bags but also cleaning,
pressing, developing patterns, and quilting them, and repeating the entire
cycle over and over and over again. These constructions often provoke an
exchange of questions and answers within my mind. "Where does the shape
come from? Is this a shape of my Japan? If so, it must have been born within
me."
Hundreds of used tea bags are required for
large projects, and in the past, these have engaged a wide community-based effort.
The greater the numbers of tea bags, the more hands are needed. I have found
such collaborative projects empowering. As bees build their nest and ant
colonies construct a complex large community, so the idea of constructing a
form from the singular tea bag contribution to the multiple end result is
fascinating. The core of the collaboration is an idea so fundamental yet
profound: one teabag at a time. One teabag transforms into hundreds, and
ultimately grows to become thousands--as the number increases the scope and
nature of the collaboration expands. Each participant experiences being a
part of something incredibly large--so large and powerful that its entire
nature is almost impossible to comprehend. In other words, the whole
"Tea Culture" is within us. Each one of us creates our culture. We
are the seed for the "Tea Culture".
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