Creating Your Own Japanese Garden

Creating Your Own Japanese Garden
Author: Takashi Sawano
Publisher: Japan Publications Trading
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1999
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 9780870409622

This book offers detailed step-by-step advice on how to design and construct Japanese gardens in various environments, using only materials widely available in the West.

The Japanese Garden

The Japanese Garden
Author: 五島聖子
Publisher: Peter Lang Incorporated, International Academic Publishers
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2003
Genre: Gardens
ISBN: 9780820463506

Even in crowded metropolitan areas, Japan's temple precincts preserve not only architecture, but the garden traditions of earlier centuries as well. To step into a temple garden is, in effect, to tread the paths of Japanese aesthetic history. This time travel experience is not unlike venturing into a medieval church situated in a modern Western metropolis. The recognized religious traditions survive in the layout and rationale of Japan's gardens: Shintō, Buddhist, and Confucian. This book explores the distinct priorities and vocabularies of these traditions as expressed in the elements of garden design, historically tracing their shared features and their interactions at particular sites. Amply illustrated, it orients the reader to the different functions of gardens, such as whether they are to be looked at or walked in.

Styles and Motifs of Japanese Gardens

Styles and Motifs of Japanese Gardens
Author: Katsuhiko Mizuno
Publisher: Japan Publications Trading
Total Pages: 64
Release: 2005
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9784889961836

Styles and Motifs Japanese Gardens is a highly accessible flip reference for the novice gardener and first time visitor. Each of the 31 beautiful Kyoto gardens featured in this book embody the unique landscaping approaches and techniques of the periods when they were created, from the Heian and Muromanchi eras to Momoyama. Features only gardens that are open to the public, making this book an ideal guide for visitors to Kyoto who wish to know more about the spirit and form of Japanese landscape arts.

Japanese Garden Notes

Japanese Garden Notes
Author: Marc Peter Keane
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9781611720358

Marc Peter Keane's personal journey through 100 Japanese gardens, looking at them with a designer's eye.

Japanese-inspired Gardens

Japanese-inspired Gardens
Author: Patricia Jonas
Publisher: Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2001
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9781889538204

From the Publisher: Covering the basic principles, aesthetics, and design practices of Japanese gardens, this book provides the practical information gardeners need to adapt these ideals to North American landscapes and sensibilities. Not a step-by-step construction manual, it teaches the fundamental principles of integrating house, garden, and landscape by making art from simple groupings of rocks, plants, and water and opening Japanese symbolism to elements with universal significance, such as water and paths. Included is an extensive encyclopedia of appropriate plants to use based on creating and defining particular eco-regions.

Kyoto Gardens

Kyoto Gardens
Author: Judith Clancy
Publisher: Tuttle Publishing
Total Pages: 156
Release: 2015-03-10
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 1462915035

"Bring the art and beauty of Japan to your garden with inspiration from Kyoto Gardens." —HGTV Gardens Featuring beautiful Japanese garden photography and insightful writing, Kyoto Gardens is a labor of love from master photographer Ben Simmons and Kyoto-based writer Judith Clancy. In their rocks and plants, empty spaces and intimate details—Kyoto's gardens manifest a unique ability to provoke thought and delight in equal measure. These varied landscapes meld the sensuality of nature with the disciplines of cosmology, poetry and meditation. Japanese aristocrats created these gardens to display not just wealth and power, but cultural sensitivity and an appreciation for transcendent beauty. A class of professional gardeners eventually emerged, transforming Japanese landscape design into a formalized art. Today, Kyoto's gardens display an enormous range of forms—from rock gardens display of extreme minimalism and subtle hues, to stroll gardens of luscious proportions and vibrant colors. In Kyoto Gardens Simmons' photographs present a fresh and contemporary look at Kyoto's most important gardens. Their beauty is enhanced and humanized by gardeners tending the grounds using the tools of their art. Clancy's graceful text provides historical, aesthetic and cultural context to the Japanese gardens. Combining wonder and rigor, she describes how Kyoto's most beloved gardens remain faithful to their founders' creative spirit and conception. Journey to Kyoto's thirty gardens with just a turn of a page, or use the handy maps to plan your trip.

Zen Gardens

Zen Gardens
Author: Mira Locher
Publisher: Tuttle Publishing
Total Pages: 680
Release: 2012-10-10
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 1462910491

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Tenryu-ji

Tenryu-ji
Author: Norris Brock Johnson
Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2012-07-10
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 1611725267

This illustrated study of Tenryuji, ranked number one among the five great Zen temples of Kyoto and a major destination for tourism and worship, weaves together history, design, culture, and personal reflection to reveal the inner workings of a great spiritual institution. Looking at Tenryuji's present as a mirror to its past, and detailing the famous pond and rockwork composition by renowned designer Muso Soseki, Norris Brock Johnson presents the first full-length "biography" of a Zen temple garden. Norris Brock Johnson is a professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill and has been teaching and writing about Japanese temple gardens for over twenty years.

The Modern Japanese Garden

The Modern Japanese Garden
Author: Michiko Rico Nosé
Publisher:
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2005
Genre: Gardens
ISBN: 9781845331528

Japanese garden design has undergone striking developments in recent decades, as landscape designers and architects have experimented increasingly with form, style and content. This book surveys contemporary Japanese gardens, aiming to be relevant to Eastern and Western readers and their homes.

The Phone Booth in Mr. Hirota's Garden

The Phone Booth in Mr. Hirota's Garden
Author: Heather Smith
Publisher: Orca Book Publishers
Total Pages: 35
Release: 2019-09-30
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 145982105X

★ “Smith spins a quietly moving narrative...Wada’s large-scale woodblock style illustrations are a perfect complement to the story’s restrained text...The graceful way in which this book handles a sensitive and serious subject makes it a first purchase."—School Library Journal When the tsunami destroyed Makio's village, Makio lost his father . . . and his voice. The entire village is silenced by grief, and the young child's anger at the ocean grows. Then one day his neighbor, Mr. Hirota, begins a mysterious project—building a phone booth in his garden. At first Makio is puzzled; the phone isn't connected to anything. It just sits there, unable to ring. But as more and more villagers are drawn to the phone booth, its purpose becomes clear to Makio: the disconnected phone is connecting people to their lost loved ones. Makio calls to the sea to return what it has taken from him and ultimately finds his voice and solace in a phone that carries words on the wind. The Phone Booth in Mr. Hirota's Garden is inspired by the true story of the wind phone in Otsuchi, Japan, which was created by artist Itaru Sasaki. He built the phone booth so he could speak to his cousin who had passed, saying, "My thoughts couldn't be relayed over a regular phone line, I wanted them to be carried on the wind." The Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in 2011 destroyed the town of Otsuchi, claiming 10 percent of the population. Residents of Otsuchi and pilgrims from other affected communities have been traveling to the wind phone since the tsunami.