The Star Malaysia

The world in a teacup

Paris museum show digs into brew’s roots

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IT can be green, black, white or red and, after water, is the most widely consumed drink on the planet.

Tea, as we know it, was born in China 4,000 years ago and a newly opened exhibition at a Paris museum traces the highlights of its history and how it conquered the world.

The exhibition concentrat­es on China and, according to its curator Jean-Paul Desroches, reveals “distant treasures” such as paintings from the National Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan, and “others which were hidden in the storerooms” of host museum, the Guimet Museum of Asian Art.

The show includes a “Ton of Tea” – a dense block of tea leaves compressed into a cube by Chinese contempora­ry artist Ai Weiwei, and a short film by the Franco-Vietnamese director Tran Anh Hung ( The Scent of Green Papaya).

His subject is one of the world’s few masters of the elaborate Chinese tea ceremony: Tseng Yu-hui from Taiwan, the only woman in the world performing the job.

Tseng is one of the few people qualified to test the quality of tea in the presence of the highest authoritie­s.

Like a wine sommelier, she speaks of “the spirit of tea”, its tastes, its odours – up to 600 in a single tea.

She conducts a meticulous ritual to smell and taste it.

The exhibition also includes sections displaying utensils, manuscript­s, calligraph­y, paintings and rare books.

The history of tea is explained from the “boiled tea” of medieval China, Tibet and Mongolia, to the “beaten tea” of classical China and Japan, and the “infused tea” of modern China, Europe and the rest of the world.

It emerges that in China, wine and tea were forever at odds, their conflict inspiring literature and arts.

“Ancient China revolved around wine, tea came in with Buddhism,” Desroches said.

“From that was born the confrontat­ion between the world of scholars who liked drunkennes­s and that which sought serenity.” In the eighth century, the first specialist work on tea appeared, the Chajing, or Classical Book of Tea of Lu Yu.

Tea leaves, made into bricks, ceased to be regarded as having only medicinal qualities.

They became the ingredient­s of a drink used by Buddhist monks and Confucian scholars.

This was the age of “boiled tea”, a compound of mashed leaves mixed with boiled water, butter and spices.

The Song dynasty (960 to 1279) saw the age of “boiled tea”: cakes of compressed green tea turned into powder.

Whipped, it became a drink much appreciate­d by emperors and its consumptio­n gave rise to a sophistica­ted porcelain industry.

Buddhist monks introduced it into Japan and gave birth to the tea ceremony.

In the Ming dynasty (1368 to 1644), teadrinkin­g in China returned to its more austere style.

The leaves were dried and roasted and then brewed.

As it became more widely drunk and began to be exported, teapots made their appearance.

The last part of the exhibition charts the spread of tea across the world.

In 1848, the British discovered the secret of China’s tea-making – thanks to industrial espionage at Darjeeling in India.

Since 1887, Indian tea has been in competitio­n with its Chinese counterpar­t.

Today, China produces 29% of the world’s output, India 25%, Sri Lanka 9% and Japan 3%.

Visitors to the exhibition can taste a specially created “Guimet tea”.

The exhibition will run until Jan 7, 2013.

 ?? — EPA ?? Their special-tea: Women processing Oolong tea leaves in a wholesale market in Anxi county, southeast China’s Fujian province. Anxi is said to be the most important Oolong tea producer and the birthplace of Ti Kuan Yin, a popular variety of the...
— EPA Their special-tea: Women processing Oolong tea leaves in a wholesale market in Anxi county, southeast China’s Fujian province. Anxi is said to be the most important Oolong tea producer and the birthplace of Ti Kuan Yin, a popular variety of the...
 ?? — AFP ?? Tea bags: A labourer carrying a bag of tea leaves to a boat at Guijan village, Tinsukia district, some 550km from Guwahati, the capital city of the northeaste­rn state of Assam, India.
— AFP Tea bags: A labourer carrying a bag of tea leaves to a boat at Guijan village, Tinsukia district, some 550km from Guwahati, the capital city of the northeaste­rn state of Assam, India.

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