The tea ceremony is a calming ritual of making tea and serving it to guests.
It's not just about drinking tea, it's a traditional Japanese culture where you can experience
the spirit of hospitality and the beautiful ethos of Apology and Sabi.
It is also a culture that combines many arts such as how to entertain guests, the
preparation of tea rooms, tea utensils, and Japanese sweets.
Kyosei no Sato-Kurokawa Inn Museum of Art
1546-1 Kurokawa, Asakura City, Fukuoka Prefecture (former Kurokawa Elementary
School)
TEL.0946-29-0590
Business hours/11:00am-5:00pm
Closed on Mondays and Tuesdays *Open if closed on a national holiday (substitute
closings may occur) / Winter (December to February)
Admission fee: 500 yen for adults, 300 yen for children (elementary and junior high school
students)
With coffee or juice
e-mail:kyousei@tj9.so-net.jp
https://blog.goo.ne.jp/kyouseinosato
https://kyouseinosato.jimdofree.com/
FACEBOOK:廃校利用山里の美術館「共星の里」
Kyogen is a form of theater that uses dialogue (words) and gestures (movement).
We will use laughter to express stories of failures that you have experienced and things
that are likely to happen in your life.
To put it simply, Kyogen is a play of jokes and lies.
Comedy and the roots of today's manzai and skits.
In the late Edo period, the Fukuoka Kuroda domain had Chikuzen shibori, and it was also made in its subsidiary domain, Akizuki.
Since the Meiji era, the name has been known overseas, and during the Taisho era, it was one of the largest producers of Amagi shibori in Japan, but the industry ceased due to a shortage of supplies after the war.
Currently, efforts are being made to spread the word and promote the area with the aim of recovery.