Hiroshi Sugimoto: Glass Tea House 'Mondrian'
Le Stanze del Vetro–Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Venice, 2014–16

1/14 Tea ceremony, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, 2014, Le Stanze del Vetro, VenicePhoto: Enrico Fiorese
2/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
3/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
4/14 Tea ceremony, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
5/14 Tea ceremony, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
6/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
7/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
8/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
9/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto installing Glass Tea House Mondrian, Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, 2014-16Photo: Enrico Fiorese
10/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Chateau de Versailles, 2018-19
11/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Chateau de Versailles, 2018-19
12/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto, Glass Tea House Mondrian, Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art, Kyoto, 2020
13/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto: Glass Tea House MondrianEdited with foreword by David Hrankovic. Preface by Pasquale Gagliardi. Text by Annabelle Selldorf. Published by Walther König, Cologne, 2015.
14/14 Hiroshi Sugimoto: Glass Tea House MondrianEdited with foreword by David Hrankovic. Preface by Pasquale Gagliardi. Text by Annabelle Selldorf. Published by Walther König, Cologne, 2015.

The Glass Tea House Mondrian is an installation by the artist Hiroshi Sugimoto whose title is inspired by the abstraction found in the 16th century Japanese tea ceremony as perfected by Sen no Rikyû. World-renowned for his black and white photography, this work marked Sugimoto's first architectural intervention in Venice. The environment consists of a floating glass cube that sits inside a reflecting pool clad with a glass Bisazza mosaic. A path of custom-made ceramic pavers leads the visitor to a viewing area to witness the tea ceremony performed within the cube at regular intervals. The perimeter of the area is delineated with a fence made of Japanese cedar, modelled after the Shinto Ise-Shrine.

D.H.office was brought in to de-install, pack and store the pavilion, as well as advise on future exhibition locations for the piece. David Hrankovic also edited and produced a book to accompany the work, published by Walther König in 2015. Following its presentation in Venice, Glass Tea House Mondrian was installed temporarily in the gardens of Versailles and at the Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art, before moving to its final resting place at the Benesse Art Site on Naoshima Island, Japan.

Glass Tea House Mondrian
Hiroshi Sugimoto
Pentagram Foundation
Le Stanze del Vetro–Fondazione Giorgio Cini
Art Fabrication, Exhibitions
Venice
2014-16