Japanese Gardens
Japanese Gardens
Japanese Gardens
JAPANESE GARDENS
Around 552 A.D. Buddhism was officially installed from China, via Korea, into Japan.
Japanese gardens were influenced by the Chinese philosophy of Daoism,
and Amida Buddhism, imported from China in or around 552 A.D. Daoist legends
spoke of five mountainous islands inhabited by the Eight Immortals, who lived in
perfect harmony with nature. Each Immortal flew from his mountain home on the back
of a crane. The islands themselves were located on the back of an enormous sea turtle.
In Japan, the five islands of the Chinese legend became one island, called Horai-
zen, or Mount Horai. Replicas of this legendary mountain, the symbol of a perfect
world, are a common feature of Japanese gardens, as are rocks representing
turtles and cranes of the Chinese gardens, but gradually Japanese garden designers
began to develop their own aesthetics, based on Japanese materials and Japanese
culture. By the Edo period, the Japanese garden had its own distinct appearance Since
the end of the 19th century, Japanese gardens have also been adapted to Western
settings Japanese gardens also were strongly influenced
ELEMENTS OF JAPANESE GARDENS
WATER –
• Rocks and water also symbolize yin and yang, (in and yōin Japanese)
in Buddhist philosophy; the hard rock and soft water complement each
other, and water, though soft, can wear away rock.
Rock composition at
•Rough volcanic rocks are usually used to represent mountains or as
Tōfuku-ji
stepping stones .
•Smooth and round sedimentary rocks (suisei-gan) are used around
lakes or as stepping stones.
•Hard metamorphic rocks are usually placed by waterfalls or streams.
FISH
•The idea of using fish in landscape garden is borrowed from
Chinese garden.
A large carp
•Goldfish were introduced to Japan in the 16th century.
in the garden
of Suizen-ji
GARDEN BRIDGES
Bridges could be made of stone (ishibashi), or of The Flying Geese Bridge in Kenroku-en
wood, or made of logs with earth on top, covered garden (Between 1822 and 1874).
Garden fences
Garden Gate
Japanese gardens largely followed the Chinese model, but gradually developed
their own principles and aesthetics.
ASYMMETRY - Japanese gardens are not laid on straight axes, or with a single
feature dominating the view. Buildings and garden features are usually placed to
be seen from a diagonal, and are carefully composed into scenes that contrast right
angles, such as buildings with natural features, and vertical features, such as rocks,
bamboo or trees, with horizontal features, such as water.
According to garden historians David and Michigo Young, at the heart of the
Japanese garden is the principle that a garden is a work of art. "Though inspired
by nature, it is an interpretation rather than a copy; it should appear to be natural,
but it is not wild.".
PURPOSE & STYLES
Earlier the gardens were designed for recreation and aesthetic pleasure of
emperors and nobles, while the gardens of Buddhist temples were
designed for contemplation and mediation.
Features –
It featured a large, ornate residence with two long wings
reaching south to a large lake and garden.
Features –
These gardens featured a lake island called Nakajima, where
the Buddha hall was located, connected to the shore by an
arching bridge.
Features –
Features –
There is an outer garden, with a gate and covered arbor where
guests wait for the invitation to enter.
They then pass through a gate to the inner garden, where they
wash their hands and rinse their mouth, as they would before
entering a Shinto shrine, before going into the teahouse itself.
The path is always kept moist and green, so it will look like a
remote mountain path, and their are no bright flowers that might
distract the visitor from his meditation. A teahouse and roji, or tea
garden, at Ise Jingu.
PROMENADE GARDENS
These gardens were meant to be seen by following a path
clockwise around the lake from one carefully-composed scene
to another.
Elements of promenade gardens –
•Scenery – mountains ,temples Katsura Imperial Villa, the
•Pathway , fences, bamboo ,buildings prototype for the promenade
garden
Features –
These gardens used two techniques to provide interest;
"borrowed scenery", which took advantage of views of
scenery outside the garden, such as mountains or temples,
incorporating them into the view so the garden looked larger
than it really was; and "hide-and-reveal," which used winding
paths, fences, bamboo and buildings to hide the scenery so the
visitor would not see it until he was at the best view point.Two hills covered with
trimmed bamboo grass
Eg - Edo Period gardens also often feature recreations of which represent Mount Lu
famous scenery or scenes inspired by literature; in China. This feature is in
Suizen-ji Jōju-en Garden in Kumamoto has a miniature version Kōraku-en Garden in Tokyo
of Mount Fuji, and Katsura Villa in Kyoto has a miniature
version of the Ama-no- hashidate sandbar in Miyazu Bay, near
Kyoto.
COURTYARD GARDEN
Features –
These tiny gardens were meant to be seen, not entered. These were
designed to give a glimpse of nature and some privacy to the residents of
the rear side of the building.
Eg. - A good example from the Meiji Period is found in the villa of
Murin-an in Kyoto.
Differences between Japanese and Chinese gardens
Viewpoint – Viewpoint –
Later Japanese gardens are designed to be seen These are designed to be seen from the inside,
from the outside. from the buildings in the center of the garden.
Symmetry – Symmetry –
The structures in a Japanese garden from the Edo These are usually symmetrically designed along
period onward are organized asymmetrically. straight axes.
Adachi Museum of Art Garden, Yasugi. A spacious Japanese garden, Suizen-ji Jōju-
(Kanshō-shiki Garden, completed in 20th century) en, near Kumamoto Castle