A scene of 'chanoyu' (Japanese tea ceremony) set within a moonlit garden, rendered in the 'yamato-e' painting tradition on handmade washi paper. The composition features asymmetrical balance with a rustic tea pavilion nestled among moss-covered stones and twisted pine trees. A kimono-clad tea master performs the precise ritual with elegant, economical movements, embodying 'michi' (the way). Delicate brushwork captures bamboo water vessels, iron kettle, and ceremonial utensils with meticulous detail. Traditional mineral pigments in muted indigo, ochre, and celadon green create subtle depth, while silver leaf suggests moonlight filtering through maple branches. The scene expresses 'yugen' (profound grace) and 'ma' (meaningful emptiness) through deliberate negative space. Subtle seasonal references—a single autumn maple leaf floating in a stone basin—evoke 'mono no aware' (the pathos of impermanence). The tranquil scene captures 'ichigo ichie' (one time, one meeting) philosophy central to tea ceremony tradition. <lora:RM_Artistify_v1.0M:0.3> <lora:boFLUX Double Exposure Magic v2:0.5> <lora:flux_dev:1>
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