The Woodcarver's Emptying

Ch'ing, the chief carpenter, was carving wood into a stand for hanging musical instruments. When finished, the work appeared to those who saw it as though of supernatural execution. And the Prince of Lu asked him, saying, "What mystery is there in your art?" "No mystery, your Highness," replied Ch'ing; "and yet there is something. "When I am about to make such a stand, I guard against any diminution of my vital power. I first reduce my mind to absolute quiescence. Three days in this condition, and I become oblivious of any reward to be gained. Five days, and I become oblivious of any fame to be acquired. Seven days, and I become unconscious of my four limbs and my physical frame. Then, with no thought of the Court present to my mind, my skill becomes concentrated, and all disturbing elements from without are gone. I enter some mountain forest. I search for a suitable tree. It contains the form required, which is afterwards elaborated. I see the stand in my mind's eye, and then set to work. Otherwise, there is nothing. I bring my own native capacity into relation with that of the wood. What was suspected to be of supernatural execution in my work was due solely to this."

Zhuangzi, Zhuangzi, Chapter 19: 'Mastering Life' (trans. Herbert A. Giles, 1889) (c. 300 BCE)

Seven days. That’s how long the woodcarver Ch’ing needs before he can begin. Not seven days of sketching or refining technique, but seven days of progressive forgetting: first the thought of reward, then the thought of fame, then even the awareness of his own body. Only after this emptying does he walk into the forest to find his tree.

What we might expect from a master craftsman’s account is the opposite of this. We expect accumulated knowledge, hard-won skill, the addition of expertise. Instead, Ch’ing describes subtraction. His art depends on what he is willing to set aside before each new piece. The bell stand appears “supernatural” to observers precisely because it was made by someone who had, temporarily, shed the full weight of self-consciousness.

There is a line here worth lingering over: “I bring my own native capacity into relation with that of the wood.” The work lives inside that word, “relation.” A particular person encounters a particular tree, and something emerges that neither could produce alone. But the encounter is only possible after the woodcarver has emptied himself of everything extraneous, everything that might stand between his perception and the grain of the wood.

In a time when much of our creative anxiety circles around questions of speed and replacement, Ch’ing’s account offers a strange counter-narrative. The hardest part of his process isn’t the carving. It’s the willingness to become quiet enough, empty enough, to perceive what is already there. No tool, however powerful, can perform that emptying for us. Whether that is comforting or unsettling probably depends on how we feel about silence.

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