Creating a Japanese Zen Garden: For Peace and Tranquility.
The Bamboo Store.
Create a Japanese Zen Gardens Using Bamboo and Ornamental Grasses:
Creating a Zen Garden in the Japanese Style
It is important to realise that the typical Japanese Zen garden has very much a different qualities to a garden with a Chinese Feng theme both in composition and philosophy. In contrast to the geometrically arranged trees and rocks of a Western-style garden, the Japanese garden traditionally creates a scenic composition that, as artlessly as possible, mimics nature
The basic framework of the Japanese garden, according to one school of thought, is provided by rocks and the way
they are grouped. Ancient Japanese, we know, believed that a place surrounded by rocks was inhabited by gods, thus naming it amatsu iwasaka (heavenly barrier) or amatsu iwakura (heavenly seat). Likewise, a dense cluster of trees
was called himorogi (divine hedge); moats and streams, thought to enclose
Usually Japanese style gardens use bamboos and grasses very sparingly. The general approach to a Japanese garden is basically evergreen with variegated and coloured pants on the whole
conspicuous by their absence with the exception of a few carefully placed
specimens such a spring flowering cherry blossom , a Japanese Acer
palmatum purpreum, Magnolia or Camellia as a focal point,
In essence a Japanese garden is one that is unchanging tranquility therefore the permanency and stability of rocks
and stone play a significant role as well as , artificial hills, ponds, and flowing water. Raked gravel or stone replaces the familiar lawn representing flowing rivers swirling around solitary rocks or island tufts of plain green grasses and bamboo
Ponds feature in Japanese gardens however they are not highly ornamental like the Chinese and quite small. The
sound of running water being considered more important than the quantity. Empty
space is considered as important as any of the other features and needs to be
utilised or placed if that's possible with empty space? as precisely as the
other features. The overall effect should be one composed so as to resemble a
picture and, like a fine painting, invites careful and extended
viewing
Although bamboo is held in great
esteem in Japan in both philosophical and practical terms as a rule the use of
bamboo is not featured in Japanese gardens to any
excess, being limited to one or two smaller specimen plants of
either delicate upright nature or of the short clumping varieties suitable for
containers.
Japanese gardens can be classified into 2 general types: the tsukiyama (hill garden), which is composed of hills
and ponds, and the hiraniwa l (flat garden), a flat area without hills and
ponds. At first, it was common to employ the hill style for the main garden or
a mansion and the flat style for limited spaces. The latter type, however,
became more popular with the introduction of the tea ceremony and the chashitsu
(tea-ceremony room.
Japanese garden designers followed 3 basic
principles when composing scenes. They are reduced scale, symbolisation, and
"borrowed views". The first refers to the miniaturisation of natural
views of mountains and rivers so as to reunite them in a confined area. This
could mean the creation of idealised scenes of a mountain village, even within
a city.
Symbolisation involves abstraction, an example being the use of white sand to suggest the
sea. Designers "borrowed views" when they used background views that
were outside and beyond the garden, such as a mountain or the ocean, and had
them become an integral part of the scenic composition.
Ancient Japanese gardens
The earliest known gardens date back to the Asuka period (593-710) and the Naraperiod
(710-794). In the Yamato area (now in Nara Prefecture), designers of imperial
family gardens and those of powerful clans created imitations of ocean scenes
that featured large ponds dotted with islands and skirted with
seashores
It was at this
time that Buddhism was brought to Japan from the continent by way of the Korean
peninsula. Immigrants from there added continental influences to Japanese
gardens, such as stone fountains and bridges of Chinese origin.
The Kamakura period(1185-1333) that followed, saw the rise of a warrior class and the influence of
Zen priests from China, bringing about changes in the style of residential
buildings and gardens. It was not the custom of the military elite to hold
splendid ceremonies in their gardens. Instead, they preferred to enjoy their
gardens from inside the house, and gardens were designed to be appreciated
primarily for their visual appeal. In this period, priest-designers or
ishitateso (literally, rock placing monks), came to the fore.
It is said thatthe golden age of Japanese gardens occurred in the Muromachi period
(l333-I568). Groups of skilled craftsmen called senzui kawaramono (mountain,
stream, and riverbed people) were responsible for creating a new style of
garden, known as karesansui (dry mountain stream). Heavily influenced by Zen
Buddhism, these gardens are characterised by extreme abstraction: groups of
rocks represent mountains or waterfalls, and white sand is used to replace
flowing water.

|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.............
|

|
Contact us | View site map| Links
|