Rules for this activity were broken by the portable design of a 16th-century gilded room, which included a tiny entrance that one should crawl into sideways and hands-first. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this activity discussed in a 1906 English-language book-length essay that Martin Heidegger may have cribbed to develop dasein. Rikyū developed the bucolic style of spaces for this activity made from grass and wood.
ANSWER: tea ceremony [or chanoyu; or chadō; accept drinking tea or drinking matcha] (The gilded room is simply called the Golden Tea Room. The small entrances are called nijiriguchi.)
[10e] A quote from Okakura Kakuzō’s The Book of Tea is engraved in a wall in Frank Lloyd Wright’s Scottsdale studio, which, like his Wisconsin estate, bears this mythological name.
ANSWER: Taliesin [or Taliesin West; or Taliesin North; or Taliesin East; or Taliesin Spring Green]
[10h] The Book of Tea influenced this architect’s work in Japan, such as a double version of her trademark chaises longues (“shezz long”). Despite calling interior design “le blah blah blah,” Le Corbusier took credit for this French woman architect’s furniture for decades.
ANSWER: Charlotte Perriand (“pair-YOND”)
<AP, Other Arts>