Lightness of being
In the past decade or so, the term ‘wabi-sabi’ has been discussed — and demonstrated — with wild abandon. A dining table with a dent? Wabi-sabi. A chair without a back? Wabi-sabi. A lopsided lamp? If it can’t be straightened, wabi-sabi.
As the term has gained currency, more out of convenience than a resolve for cultivation, the Japanese concept, which references a Weltanschauung of finding beauty in imperfections, has been distilled beyond recognition by many, barring a few. A proud member of that minority is architect-designer extraordinaire Ashiesh Shah, the powerhouse behind the eponymous Mumbai-based atelier, who has long been a standard-bearer of the increasingly du jour concept of minimalist design, reimagining Wabi-sabi as an aesthetic paragon equally inspired by the practical and the poetic.