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This portrait is from a CommuniTea event at the Bronx Museum, 2018.
Michele's necklace represents the chemical diagram for camellia sinensis. |
LYNN:
Hi Michele. I am so glad to have the
opportunity to communicate with you about tea and your art. I know you are currently living in New York
which has been hard hit by COVID-19.
MICHELE:
During this time of isolation and confinement due to stopping the spread of
COVID-19, I greatly appreciate your reaching out to me Lynn, and wanting to
share my story with others on your blog.
Whole lives have been turned upside
down by the shutting down of New York City. But drinking my tea has
helped to keep me sane with starting each day the same as I always do. Boiling
a pot of water in my electric kettle, heating up my tea pot under hot water,
choosing my tea for the morning, steeping, then pouring. These days I tend to
add a little bit of lemon to rejuvenate the body, and lots of local honey to
combat allergies.
LYNN:
I know that for over ten years now you have been working on a project called
“Reflections in Tea.” A brief summary from your Reflections in Tea website describes
the project in this way.
Reflections in Tea is
a multi-disciplinary, social-action project that focuses on the building
of community relationships by bridging cultural boundaries through the
contemplative art of sharing Tea…[Project] participants preserve their memories and stories by creatively
transcribing them onto 4×7” sheets of tea stained notepapers produced from
drying out and flattening the previously used tea filters. The sheets are then
clipped to a net and hung together, culminating in the creation of an
ever-growing installation of fluttering paper quilts.
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This photo is from Michele's one person show at the Bronx Museum in 2016. |
LYNN: Michele, tell me about the origins of your
love of tea and how it led to your use of tea as both medium and metaphor in
your art.
MICHELE: I have always loved the
color of tea. I grew up with a grandmother who always drank tea in the morning
with lots and lots of lemon. I never picked up drinking coffee from my parents.
It is tea that sustained me through graduate school as I sought to develop a
career as an artist, so much so that I started to work with ways to incorporate
tea into my portfolio.
It all started with a footprint that
was left on the clean white floor of my studio one day by an inconsiderate
person who tramped into my space. I was very upset by the disruption, but a
professor suggested I work with this “stain” and find a way to use it as part
of my process. She prompted me to think about how we leave our memories behind
for other’s to witness. I first started to use the stains left by the growing
process in fabric as a way to mark
time, but since tea was such a big part of my daily life I also started to try
different ways to use the multi-colored stains left by various types of tea as
a metaphor for how a memory and experience can be preserved. It is through the
mark left by a stain that a story can be told and shared. This is the basic
metaphorical element of my art with tea: to share and preserve our
memories.
LYNN: How has your
"Reflections in Tea" project enriched your life?
MICHELE: When I came up with the idea for
Reflections in Tea, which was originally titled Tea House Productions, I had
been working on an earlier long-term project with manhole covers and the City
Streets. I had designed a set of historic plaques in the form of functional
manhole covers that were to be installed throughout Lower Manhattan to
reference sites of lost history, such as demolished buildings, re-arranged
street-scapes and even a buried fresh water pond. This had been
started before 9/11, which was another catastrophe that upended life in New
York City. I wished to continue working with installing a project on
the City Streets that would make passersby see the day-to-day world around them
a little differently. I have always been interested in liminal spaces, the
places that exist in between the sites where we have been and where we are
going to. Examples of these liminal spaces are hallways, stairwells, streets
and sidewalks. Throughout my practice as a site-specific installation artist
these are the sites that I have been most attracted to engaging. I wanted
to bring my love of tea and its practice as part of my daily life to the public
in a new way. The project started in a coffee cart initially
envisioned as a mobile teahouse, the main component of Reflections in Tea is
the invitation of the public to enter and sit within a semi-private space to
share a pot of tea and their stories.
~I have always been interested in liminal
spaces, the
places that exist in between the sites where we have
been and where
we are going to.~
By taking the time to cross the threshold of
the teahouse, each participant is introduced to how the drinking of tea is
practiced throughout the world as a transformative custom. I wanted
to create a private space within the public sphere of the streets of New York
where a transformative process could take place that presented the
question of what does it mean to be fully present when meeting someone for
the first time. And by being set in a street vendor cart,
the project was meant to comment on our American urban “to go”
culture by directly counterbalancing it with a personal experience that asks
one to cross over a threshold into a space set aside to slow down time.
The goal of Reflections in Tea has always been to cross over boundaries between
what is private within the public realm, and how a chance meeting between
destinations can transform one’s perspective. This is similar to the
practice of tea throughout the world as a transformative custom from the
public life out of doors to the interior private life. This practice can
be seen through the English Tea time at the end of the work day, to
the welcoming of a guest into ones home in the Middle East and by
marking the changing seasons through the Chinese practice in choosing teas
that reflect each season.
~The study and practice of these world-wide
rituals
have greatly enriched my life…~
The study and practice of these world-wide rituals have greatly
enriched my life in ways I never would have imagined, especially when I moved
to The Bronx and started to serve tea daily to seniors in a range of centers
throughout the Borough and at the Bronx Museum. I have become known as the Tea
Lady, and have helped enrich a great many lives around me through the
combination of Tea and the Arts.
And even during these days of confinement I
continue to reach out through the internet to invite others to join in the
CommuniTea of sharing reflections on the times. In the past I have brought
seniors together to dance, write poetry, make hats and now sing while with
singer/songwriter Olivier Marcaud, who arrived in the NY the day before the
travel ban. Together we have been revising our original project to work with
seniors at a nearby center through the NYC SU-CASA program to bring
them together as a choir singing their own lyrics by moving the project online through
a series of videos titled the Singing Rendezvous in The Bronx. The videos can
be found on YouTube at this link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIDGqYJvu3nHNAMtpcPgEnQ/videos. Each day we work on new ways to bring our CommuniTea
together with the goal of transforming this time of isolation into a process of
sharing.
LYNN: What tea-related projects can we look
forward to you taking on in the future?
MICHELE: I guess I
already answered this question above, but there is still more to come. I was
supposed to go to Scotland for an artist residency in an old castle so I could
focus on the next projects for Reflections in Tea. There seems to always be new
ways to keep on reviving this age-old tradition of bringing people together to
share a cuppa. Even if I end up not being able to travel abroad this summer, I
will keep on coming up with the ways to share tea with others, and to inspire
communities to spread the word themselves.
~~~
I (Lynn here) have always wondered
what it is about tea that so thoroughly enchants me. These two books (pictured above) by artist Michele
Brody contain, if not a definitive answer
to my wondering, then plenty of food for thought. These books document the “Reflections in Tea”
project that Michele has been working on for over ten years now.
Michele’s books have given me an
abundance “tea thoughts” to mull over. The books include the responses,
reflections, and stories of hundreds of people who have taken tea with Michele
over these past ten years. Since learning about Michele and this project, I felt
that my series of blog posts about tea in art would not be complete without an
interview and exploration of her work.
For further information about Michele
and her “Reflections in Tea” project, see: