Some time ago I went onto the Muji website and on the homepage I saw a photo of the Great Buddha in Tōdai-ji which my wife and I saw when we visited Nara in Japan in 2018. In the bottom right hand corner of the photo you could read the title ‘Pleasant, somehow‘. I clicked on it and this is the text I found (this has now moved to another section of there website):
To be human is to be a living being that cleans. But this does not refer to polishing to a shine either objects or our environment. If you observe a bit, you’ll understand that cleaning is an activity that establishes a comfortable balance between nature and the man-made.
Humans are the only animals that create cities and environments by arranging them to suit us. This is why the environment that has been modified by humans according to their needs is written as “人工” in Japanese, literally “human+ work/craft/ingenuity”, and translated as “man-made”. The man-made should be comfortable, but when there is a proliferation of materials that are too corrosive or erosive of nature, like plastic and concrete, people begin to long for nature. However, if we completely leave nature alone, dust and fallen leaves pile up, and plants thrive wildly. This is probably why human beings have lived with moderate acceptance, and moderate abatement, of nature.
Even when you build a house or create an outdoor space, it’s uncouth and tasteless if the manmade aspects are overbearing. Let nature take its course to some extent; don’t over-rake the leaves, or trim the greenery to the extreme. The secret of cleaning may be to discover moderate comfort: places where nature and the man-made struggle against one another, like the water’s edge, where the breaking waves wash the sandy beach.
In 2019, we went around the world photographing scenes in which people were pictured cleaning. This was before COVID-19 swept the globe. We had been wondering if the very essence of human beings lies dormant in the everyday and ordinary work of cleaning, which transcends culture and civilization. Today, when the entire world has stopped, these photos and videos make us miss our ordinary routines. No matter how technology advances in the future, people are living things, embracing a rhythm of life that perpetually resonates in the depth of the body. We can move forward heeding this natural internal rhythm.
One of the things that struck me is how brave they had been to post this on the homepage. I think they’ve outlined the relationship between nature and the built environment in a beautiful way as well as how look after and clean both.
When we travelled to Tokyo one of the shops I wanted to make sure we visited was Found Muji – a concept store selling a collection of unbranded products from across the world that have been ‘found‘ by Muji and are largely left as they are. I loved everything and wanted to buy it all but we settled for a beautiful salt and pepper shaker set designed by Wilhelm Wagenfeld in 1952-53 for WMF Germany.