, that is, gardens in traditional Japanese
style, can be found at private homes, in neighborhood or city parks, and at historical landmarks such as Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines and old castle.
Some of the Japanese gardens most famous in the
West, and within Japan as well, are dry
gardens or
rock garden,
karesansui. The tradition of the
Tea master has produced highly refined Japanese
gardens of quite another style, evoking rural simplicity. In
Japanese culture, garden-making is
a high art, intimately related to the linked arts of
calligraphy and
ink
painting. Since the end of the 19th century, Japanese gardens
have also been adapted to Western settings.
Japanese gardens were developed under the influences of the
distinctive and stylized
Chinese
gardens. One of the great interest for the historical
development of the Japanese garden,
bonseki,
bonsai and related arts is the c. 1300 Zen
monk
Kokan Shiren and his rhymeprose
essay
Rhymeprose on a Miniature Landscape Garden.
The tradition of Japanese gardening was historically passed down
from
sensei to apprentice. In recent
decades this has been supplemented by various trade schools. The
opening words of Zōen's
Illustrations for designing mountain,
water and hillside field landscapes (1466) are "If you have
not received the oral transmissions, you must not make gardens" and
its closing admonition is "You must never show this writing to
outsiders. You must keep it secret".
|
|
 Buenos Aires Japanese Gardens, one of
the greatest outside Japan.
|
 Karesansui garden at Tōfuku-ji in
Kyoto
|
 This garden has an abundance of
plants, including seasonal flowers.
|
|
|
|
|
 A kaiyu-shiki or strolling
garden
|
 Twenty stone snow-viewing lanterns in
Monte Palace Tropical Garden on Madeira
|
Typical features
A catalogue of features "typical" of the Japanese garden may be
drawn up without inquiring deeply into the aesthetic underlying
Japanese practice. Typical Japanese gardens have at their center a
home from which the garden is viewed. In addition to residential
architecture, depending on the archetype, Japanese gardens often
contain several of these elements:
- Water, real or symbolic.
- Rocks or stone arrangements (or settings).
- A lantern, typically of stone.
- A teahouse or pavilion.
- An enclosure device such as a hedge, fence, or wall of
traditional character.
- A bridge to the island, or stepping
stones.
Styles
Traditional Styles:
Karesansui Gardens
Karesansui Gardens (枯山水) or "dry landscape” gardens were influenced
mainly by Zen Buddhism and can be found at Zen temples of
meditation (Japan Guide). Unlike other traditional gardens, there
is no water present in Karesansui gardens. However, there is raked
gravel or sand that simulates the feeling of water. The
rocks/gravel used are chosen for their artistic shapes, and mosses
as well as small shrubs are used to further garnish the Karesansui
style (Japanese Lifestyle). All in all, the rocks and moss are used
to represent ponds, islands, boats, seas, rivers, and mountains in
an abstract way (Japan Guide).
- Example: Ryōan-ji
, temple in
Kyoto, has a garden famous for representing this style.
Daisen-in
, created in 1513, is also particularly
renowned.
Tsukiyama Gardens
Tsukiyama Gardens often copy famous landscapes from China or Japan,
and they commonly strive to make a smaller garden appear more
spacious (Japan Guide). This is accomplished by utilizing shrubs to
block views of surrounding buildings, and the garden's structure
usually tries to make onlookers focus on nearby mountains in the
distance (Japanese Lifestyle). By doing this, it seems that the
garden has the mountains as part of its grounds. Ponds, streams,
hills, stones, trees, flowers, bridges, and paths are also used
frequently in this style (Japan Guide).
Chaniwa Gardens
Chaniwa Gardens are built for holding tea ceremonies. There is
usually a tea house where the ceremonies occur, and the styles of
both the hut and garden are based on the simple concepts of the
sado (Japan Guide). Usually, there are stepping stones leading to
the tea house, stone lanterns, and stone basins (tsukubai) where
guests purify themselves before a ceremony(Japan Guide).
Japanese gardens might also fall into one of these styles:
- Kanshoh-style gardens which are viewed from a residence.
- Pond gardens, for viewing from a boat.
- Strolling gardens (kaiyū-shiki), for viewing a
sequence of effects from a path which circumnavigates the garden.
The 17th-century Katsura garden in Kyoto is a famous exemplar.
Other gardens also use similar rocks for decoration, some of which
come from distant parts of Japan. In addition,
bamboos and related plants,
evergreens including
Japanese black pine, and such deciduous
trees as
maples grow above a carpet of
ferns and mosses.
The use of stones, water, and plantings
Though often thought of as tranquil sanctuaries that allow
individuals to escape from the stresses of daily life, Japanese
gardens are designed for a variety of purposes. Some gardens invite
quiet contemplation, but may have also been intended for
recreation, the display of rare plant specimens, or the exhibition
of unusual rocks.
Kaiyu-shiki or Strolling Gardens require the observer to
walk through the garden to fully appreciate it. A premeditated path
takes observers through each unique area of a Japanese garden.
Uneven surfaces are placed in specific spaces to prompt people to
look down at particular points. When the observer looks up, they
will see an eye-catching ornamentation which is intended to
enlighten and revive the spirit of the observer. This type of
design is known as the Japanese landscape principle of "hide and
reveal".
Stones are used to construct the garden's paths, bridges, and
walkways. Stones can also represent a geological presence where
actual mountains are not viewable or present.
They are sometimes
placed in odd numbers and a majority of the groupings reflect
triangular shapes, which often are the mountains of China
.
A water source in a Japanese garden should appear to be part of the
natural surroundings; this is why one will not find fountains in
traditional gardens. Man-made streams are built with curves and
irregularities to create a serene and natural appearance.
Lanterns are often placed beside some of the most
prominent water basins (either a pond or a stream) in a garden. In
some gardens one will find a dry pond or stream. Dry ponds and
streams have as much impact as do the ones filled with water.
Green plants are another element of Japanese gardens. Japanese
traditions prefer subtle green tones, but flowering trees and
shrubs are also used. Many plants in imitated Japanese gardens of
the West are indigenous to Japan, though some sacrifices must be
made to account for the differentiating climates. Some plants, such
as
sugar maple and
firebush, give the garden a broader palette of
seasonal color.
Overview of Japanese Garden History
During the
Asuka period (538-710),
gardens were supposed to express Buddhism and Taoism through
replicating the mountainous regions in China (Japanese Lifestyle).
Ruins of these types of gardens can be found in Fujiwara and Heijyo
castle towns (Japanese Lifestyle).
During the
Heian period (794-1185),
gardens shifted from solely representing religious beliefs to
becoming, "a place for ceremonies, amusement, and contemplation"
(Miller). Gardens began to surround mansions that had the
shinden-zukuri style (Japanese Lifestyle). In this style,
the garden was located at the front of a building, also known as
the south side (Japanese Lifestyle). As part of the garden style,
there was water flowing through artificial passages that eventually
spilled into ponds with little islands in them (Japanese
Lifestyle). Very few of these gardens have survived to this day,
and thus, are certainly a rarity in modern history. Despite the
lack of modern day examples, we have the book of
Sakuteiki
that describes how people of this era formulated this garden style
movement (Japanese Lifestyle).Later in this period, pure-land-style
gardens became popular through the
Pure Land Buddhism influence, and these
gardens imitated the Paradise in the Western Pureland as a result
(Japanese Lifestyle). During this shift in style, the Japanese also
began to model their gardens and homes after the Amitabha hall
style instead of the shinden style (Japanese Lifestyle).Examples of
the Amitabha style can be seen today in Mahayana Hall (Nara),
Byodoin (Uji, Kyoto), the Jyoruri Temple, and Motsuji Temple
(Hiraizumi, Nishi, Iwai, Iwate) (Japanese Lifestyle).
In the
Kamakura and
Muromachi periods (1185-1573), a great many
gardens were created during these two time periods due to improved
garden techniques and the development of Syoinzukuri style
(Japanese Lifestyle). Zen beliefs were also flourishing at this
time and had great influences over garden techniques and purposes.
Another factor that allowed gardens to flourish stems from the fact
that the shoguns simply enjoyed gardens. Dry landscape style also
emerged during this time (Japanese Lifestyle). A notable gardener
who appeared during these periods is Soseki Muso: He made Saihoji
Temple (Kyoto), Tenruji Temple (Kyoto), and Zuizenji Temple
(Kamakura) gardens. (Japanese Lifestyle)
After the Muromachi Period, Japanese tea ceremonies became an
intricate part of Japanese culture (Japanese Lifestyle). Sen no
Rikyu (1517-1591) created the traditional style of a tea house
where there was usually a roji (“dewy path”) leading to the house
(Japanese Lifestyle). Besides the tea houses, gardens constructed
in the
Edo period (1603-1868) reflected
the tastes and style of each individual shogun ruler. Instead of
being a religious symbol, gardens shifted to being a symbol of a
shogun’s prestige and power (Miller).
These tea house styled
houses and gardens can be seen in Kenrokuen
(Kanazawa), Kōraku-en
(Okayama), Ritsurin Park (Takamsatsu), Koishikawa
Korakuen
(Tokyo
), and
Suizenji Park (Kumamoto) (Japanese Lifestyle).
In the
Meiji period following the
modernization of Japan, famous traditional gardens were owned by
businessmen and politicians. Some of these extensive gardens are
open to public viewing in Murinan (Kyoto) and Chinzanso (Tokyo)
(Japanese Lifestyle).Famous gardeners of this period include 7th
generation
Jihe Ogawa, known as Ueji, and
innovative dry landscape garden designer Mirei Shigemori. (Japanese
Lifestyle)
Cultural Aspects of Japanese Gardens
Poetry
Many poems were inspired and written about the different Japanese
Gardens. An example of the poems written includes:
- Chiimei’s haiku about a tea ceremony hut and garden: “I laid a
foundation and roughly thatched roof. I fastened hinges to the
joints of the beams, the easier to move elsewhere should anything
displease me. . . . Since first I hid my traces here in the heart
of Mount Hino, I have added a lean-to on the south and a porch of
bamboo. On the west I have built a shelf for holy water, and inside
the hut, along the west wall, I have installed an image of Amida. .
. . Above the sliding door that faces north I have built a little
shelf on which I keep three or four black leather baskets that
contain books of poetry and music and extracts from the sacred
writings. Beside them stand a folding iioto and a lute. Along the
east wall I have spread long fern fronds and mats of straw, which
serve as my bed for the night. I have cut open a window in the
eastern wall, and beneath it have made a desk. Near my pillow is a
square brazier in which I burn brushwood. To the north of the hut I
have staked out a small plot of land that I have enclosed with a
rough fence and made into a garden. I grow many species of herbs
there.” (Varley pg. 93)
Literature
- The Tale of Genji describes the
“shinden-zukun” style garden of the Heian
Period.
- During the Heian Period the “Sakuteiki” was written- the first book to discuss
allotment of land, stone arrangements, artificial waterfalls, water
passages, and planting.
Tea Ceremonies
After the tea ceremony was refined by Sen Rikyu, the tea garden,
house, and utensils all served as a way to “awaken consciousness
and to realize with humility our relationship with all that is
around us and with the universe itself(Miller).” Also, tea
ceremonies were partly designed to teach participants how to gain
absolute control over body and mind (Kato p. 27). As a result, "it
emphasizes not disconnection but connection between body movement
and mind (Kato p. 27)." Culturally, the Japanese followed the five
Confucian virtues (loyalty, righteousness, politeness, wisdom, and
trust) to ground these tea ceremony ideals off of (Kato p. 27). In
short, the tea ceremonies were a cultural activity to teach
Japanese/Confucian virtues that were important for life.
Noteworthy Japanese gardens
In Japan
The
Minister of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science and Technology
of the government of Japan
designates
the most notable of the nation's scenic beauty as Special
Places of Scenic Beauty, under the Law for the Protection
of Cultural Properties. As of
March 1
2007, 29 sites are listed, more than a half of
which are Japanese gardens, as below;
Boldface entries specify World Heritage Sites.
- Tohoku Region
- Kantō region
- Chūbu region
- Kansai Region
- Byodo-In
Garden (Uji,
Kyoto)
- Jisho-ji
Garden (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- Nijō Castle
Ninomaru Garden (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- Rokuon-ji
Garden (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- Ryōan-ji
Garden (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- Tenryu-ji
Garden (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- The garden of Sanbōin in Daigo-ji
(Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- The moss garden
of Saihō-ji
(the "Moss Temple") (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- Daitoku-ji
Garden (Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- The
garden of Daisen-in
in Daitoku-ji
(Kyoto,
Kyoto)
- Isuien Garden
(Nara, Nara)
- Negoro-ji
Garden (Iwade, Wakayama
)
- Chūgoku region
- Shikoku
Region
- Kyushu
Region
- Ryūkyū Islands
However, the Education Minister is not eligible to have
jurisdiction over any imperial property.
These two gardens,
administered by Imperial Household Agency
, are also considered to be great
masterpieces.
In the English-speaking world
The aesthetic of Japanese gardens was introduced to the
English-speaking community by Josiah Conder's
Landscape
Gardening in Japan (
Kelly &
Walsh, 1893). It sparked the first Japanese gardens in the
West. A second edition was required in 1912. Conder's principles
have sometimes proved hard to follow:
- "Robbed of its local garb and mannerisms, the Japanese method
reveals aesthetic principles applicable to the gardens of any
country, teaching, as it does, how to convert into a poem or
picture a composition, which, with all its variety of detail,
otherwise lacks unity and intent"
Samuel
Newsom's Japanese Garden Construction (1939) offered
Japanese aesthetic as a corrective in the construction of rock gardens
, which owed their quite separate origins in the
West to the mid-19th century desire to grow alpines in an
approximation of Alpine scree.
Australia
Canada

Japanese Garden in the Devonian
Botanic Garden Edmonton, Alberta
- Nitobe Memorial Garden
, Vancouver
, British
Columbia
- The
Devonian
Botanical Garden
, Edmonton
, Alberta
, which contains an extensive Japanese
garden
- Nikka Yuko
Garden, Lethbridge
, Alberta
[74321]
- The Japanese Garden and
Pavilion, Montreal
Botanical Garden, Quebec

- Kariya Park, Mississauga
, Ontario
[74322]
United Kingdom
- England
- Northern Ireland
- Scotland
Ireland
Singapore
United States of America

Kubota Garden in Seattle features
these contrasting bridge types -- both illustrative of a Japanese
garden themes.
- Kumamoto En (San Antonio, Texas
)
- Morikami
Museum and Japanese Gardens
, Delray Beach, Florida
- Normandale Japanese Garden (Bloomington,
Minnesota
)
- Portland Japanese Garden
(Portland, Oregon
)
- Seattle
Japanese Garden at the Washington Park Arboretum,
Kubota
Garden
(Seattle, Washington
)
- The Japanese Garden
(Los Angeles, California
)
- Seiwa-en
at the Missouri Botanical Garden
(St. Louis, Missouri
)
- Yuko-En on
the Elkhorn (Georgetown, Kentucky
)
- Shigematsu Memorial Japanese Garden at Lansing Community College,
Lansing,
Michigan

In other countries

The Buenos Aires Japanese
Gardens.
- The Netherlands:
- The Japanse Tuin of Clingendael park
- The Tsubo-en karesansui garden
in Lelystad is a private Modern Japanese Zen (karesansui, dry rock)
garden in The Netherlands. All details including the realization
are documented on the website www.zen-garden.org
See also
References
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Garden and
landscape design: Japanese. Accessed: 7 Mar. 2008.
- The Illustrations, nevertheless, are translated and
annotated in David A. Slawson, Secret Teachings in the Art of
Japanese Gardens (New York/Tokyo: Kodansha 1987), which forms
in effect an introduction to the text.
- MEXT : Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science and Technology
- JNTO Website | Find a Location | Kyoto |
Katsura
- JNTO Website | Find a Location | Kyoto | Shugaku-in
Imperial Villa
- Slawson 1987:15 and note2.
- Conder quoted in Slawson 1987:15.
- Slawson, David A. Secret Teachings in the Art of Japanese
Gardens (New York/Tokyo: Kodansha 1987)
- Yagi, Koji A Japanese Touch for Your Home (Kodansha
1982)
External links
- Japanese Garden Design
- Ame (rain) Japanese style private garden near Bolton in
Lancashire England - an on-going project
- Japanese Garden Design Plans
- Jgarden —
Japanese Garden Database
- Japanesegardening.org — Japanese Gardening
information
- Meditations on
the Japanese Garden
- Japanese Garden at Fairfeild University
- Paradise - The Gardens of Tokyo : a portfolio of
photographs by Tim Porter
- About Japanese gardens: Pictures and links
- The Journal
of Japanese Gardening Magazine
- Japanese Gardens, Bowdoin College
- Miller, P. (2005), The Japanese Garden: Gateway to the Human
Spirit, International Journal of Humanities & Peace 2005, Vol.
21 Issue 1, Retrieved August 3, 2008 from: http://researchport.umd.edu
- Kato, E. (2004), The Tea Ceremony and Women’s Empowerment in
Modern Japan, RoutledgeCurzon, Retrieved August 3, 2008 from:
http://www.netlibrary.com.ezproxy.umuc.edu/Reader/
- Varely, P. (2000), Japanese Culture Fourth Edition, The Maple –
Vaile Book Manufacturing Group, Retrieved August 3, 2008 from:
http://www.netlibrary.com.ezproxy.umuc.edu/Reader/
- Japan Lifestyles. (2008), Japanese Garden History, GNU Free
Documentation License, Retrieved August 2, 2008 from: http://www.japaneselifestyle.com.au/
- Gardens, Japan Guide (1996-2008), Retrieved August 3, 2008
from: http://www.japan-guide.com/
- Based on a real world example, the
Tsubo-en garden in Lelystad, The
Netherlands, www.zen-garden.org offers an online guide with a
pragmatic structured 6-phase approach to realize
and maintain a garden, with specific focus and many details and
references on the Japanese karesansui (dry rock) Zen
garden