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    Categories: Japanology

Japanese Garden: History, Design Principles, and Elements

Hamarikyu Garden in Tokyo, Japan

Do you want to create a Japanese-style garden? Japanese gardens have a unique composition that makes us feel still and calm. What is it about them? Understanding the basics, design principles, and elements will greatly help you create your Japanese garden.

Origin and Brief History of Japanese Garden

A long time ago, people lived with nature, feeling a much stronger bond with it and awe for it simultaneously. As ancient Shinto indicates, people had a tremendous amount of respect for the large rocks, stones, and mountains.

People believed kami (deities) resided in those rocks and stones, and they created the visible boundary by setting up the stones to protect the area as a sacred space, which would turn into Shinto shrines later.

In the meantime, as people benefited from the sea, they assumed certain islands as sacred spots for worshipping kami (deities).

These facts are considered to be the origin of the Japanese garden.

Although Japan adopted other cultures over time, the Japanese garden remains unique to this day.

Influence of Chinese Garden – Japanese Garden

In the ancient Chinese folk belief in immortals, it’s believed four legendary wizards were living on a different island. It became the foundation of Taoism and the origin of folklore and myths.

They began creating gardens imitating this idea, exported to Japan in the Asuka period in the 6th to 7th centuries.

Full-scale Japanese Garden Projects

We can see the influence of the remains of the pond garden in the Asuka Capital site ever since people began working on full-scale Japanese garden projects.

The garden site, found in Asuka-mura, Nara Prefecture, is considered the Imperial Garden of the Asuka Capital and is considered Japan’s oldest garden site.

Types of the Traditional Japanese Gardens

Just as we mentioned the influence of other cultures, people created many types of Japanese gardens and developed various architectural styles.

Japanese Architecture: Overview of Wide Varieties of Buildings in History

They tell us where their interests and thoughts are. We will take a look at them in chronological order.

Winding Stream Garden – Japanese Garden

Kenrokuen Garden in Kanazawa, Japan, in winter

In the Asuka and the Nara period (the 6th century to the whole 7th century), the winding stream garden began to be created due to the popularity of the “winding stream banquet”, which was very popular among the courtiers.

It was a game that puts a flat cup of sake (Japanese wine) in it on the stream, people create poems in a relay form, one has to drink it up if he can’t make one before the cup passes him by.

Pure Land Style Garden – Japanese Garden

The Pure Garden at Motsuji Temple in Iwate, Japan

In the Heian period, courtiers created gardens inside their palatial-style houses.

They developed the garden with a pond and spring, including islands, bridges, and winding streams. The gardens were meant for viewing from the path, and that is why they never revealed the whole garden’s beauty in one spot.

They must be big enough to enable visitors to walk along the path and spacious simultaneously to allow the path to take turns. Sometimes, they enjoyed riding on a boat in a pond.

Zen Garden – Japanese Garden

Sogenchi Pond Garden at Tenryuji Temple in Kyoto, Japan

The Zen garden is mainly designed to achieve enlightenment. This type of garden developed in the Muromachi period. We will see the details of two types of them below.

A Moss Garden

Moss Garden in Kyoto, Japan

The Moss thrives naturally in humid and rainy climates in Japan. Moss gardens create a soft and gentle feel, and their green colors calm our eyes and souls.

Muso Soseki, a multi-talented Zen Buddhist monk, was the first Zen garden creator and developed gardens for Saiho-ji Temple, aka “the Moss Temple” and Tenryu-ji Temple.

Karesansui – Dry Rock Gardens

Zen rock garden at Ryuanji Temple in Kyoto, Japan

The dry rock gardens are elementary yet unique and modern-looking, usually placed in a minimal area compared to the former gardens.

This garden style became pretty popular thanks to the growing popularity of Zen Buddhism. It contains no water element and is designed to portray a scene of mountains, hills, rivers, and islands.

Sand gravel raked into a particular pattern symbolizes the waves in the river or the sea, while rocks in the sand symbolize mountains.

They reproduce natural landscapes more abstractly using stones, gravel, and sand on mountains, islands, and rivers. They refer to the Zen philosophy and try to evoke a deeper meaning.

You find Karesansui gardens in the Zen temples, shrines, and houses. This is because its compact size fits the bill.

The motifs created by rocks, stones, and gravels are not confined to natural surroundings such as mountains and rivers, but also some thoughts, specific places, legends, or abstract designs.

Tea Garden Roji – Japanese Garden

As the name suggests, they are designed for the tea ceremony.

Chado: “The Way of Tea” Cultivates Hospitality and Zen Spirit

In the Azuchi Momoyama period (1573-1603), when powerful feudal lords began to create their own tea houses, tea gardens were born along with it.

Japanese Tea House: Architecture of Ultimate Spiritual World

They contain a tea house where the ceremony is held and a stone basin where guests can purify themselves before participating. The path with stepping stones is a common sight, which leads the guests to the tea house.

The Tea Garden has a very intimate atmosphere and is meant to provide a moment of meditation for the guests.

Feudal Lords’ Gardens – Japanese Garden

Autumn scenery of fiery maple trees by a wooden bridge reflected in the peaceful water of a pond in Koishikawa Korakuen, a traditional Japanese garden famous for brilliant fall foliage in Tokyo, Japan

After a long time of warring states, people began to enjoy a sense of peace during the Edo period (1603-1868). Many feudal lords competed for their prominent gardens. Most are large enough to include a tea house, bridges, and gazebos.

We can say this is the grand sum of the traditional Japanese gardens. It adopted various elements of gardens in the past.

This is when common citizens began to have their gardens at home. The gardening culture flourished, and more than 200 gardening books were published.

Professional gardeners grew plum trees, cherry blossoms, camellias, and morning glories, and they became pretty popular.

Japanese Garden Design Elements and Principles

Almost all the elements indicate some symbolism, making watching the Japanese garden interesting.

The design principles are see-through once you look at its elements.

Overall, the designer creates the micro Cosmo, letting us enjoy exploring his garden like solving a mystery.

Stones

Large rocks at Genkyuen Garden in Shiga, Japan

In ancient Shinto, large rocks and stones were revered as kami (deities).

Over time, other elements would come into the picture. However, merely setting stones meant an elementary garden at the beginning.

Japanese give stones much meaning according to their shapes, such as Funaishi (ship-shaped rock) and sharp-shaped stones, which resemble Horai Island, where it’s believed that immortal mountain wizards reside in Taoism.

When the rock is set on a pond, it means it’s an island, when it’s set in the shallows, we assume it as a rough coast. So, we read a designer’s mind by seeing its shape and location.

In the Dry Rock Gardens, raked gravel resembles water as streams, showing us the flow of the river or waves of the sea.

Islands

When constructing a Shinto shrine, they created a pond and an island in it to worship kami (deity).

The size of the islands varies from single-stone outcroppings to large islands big enough to support buildings and trees. For longevity, they often carry religious symbols such as turtles and cranes.

Water

Tsukubai: Japanese water basin

The sound of running water can be calming and mask traffic noise, perfect for this meditation garden.

In the traditional Japanese garden, it contributes to the expression of nature and symbolizes renewal, wonder, and continuity.

You see water basins often, especially in the Tea Gardens.

Lanterns

Stone lantern with moss

They are usually made of stone and placed in carefully selected locations.

Originally intended to guide visitors during nocturnal celebrations, its light was also considered as the light of knowledge clearing away the clouds of ignorance.

Other Japanese garden elements are often paired with the water basin, especially for the tea ceremony.

Flowers and Plants

Blue Hydrangea

Plants play a vital role in Japanese and Western gardens. Each plant tells us the season, and its colors add a nice change to the garden.

Each of them has been loved and symbolized for a specific thing.

Here, we will look at a few plants in the traditional Japanese garden.

Plum Trees – Ume

Although the cherry blossoms gained popularity almost as a symbol of Japan, they used to be people’s favorite trees. There are a lot of Japanese family crests of plum flower motifs.

Japanese Family Crest: List of the Lineage Symbols

Pine – Matsu

One has to prune them regularly to keep them in shape and harmony with the surroundings. It is a common tradition to hire a professional gardener to keep them neat if one has a relatively large garden.

The Matsu symbolizes perpetual youth and longevity due to its long lifespan.

Rhododendron – Tsutsuji

It’s a common sight you find well-taken care in traditional Japanese gardens. In springtime, they blossom with vivid reds, purples, pinks, and whites, radiating their beauty.

They symbolize fragile and ephemeral beauty.

Shrub Peony – Botan

Vast varieties of peony cultivars have been obtained by hybridization since its introduction from China to Japan in the 8th century.

We can enjoy their gorgeous beauty in late springtime for a few days. They require considerable care and symbolize prosperity.

Japanese Maple – Momiji

It’s quite a sight to behold when we find them in autumn. Their vivid red colors catch our eyes pleasantly and tell us we are in the harvest season.

Borrowed Scenery Shakkei

In spring, the Japanese Garden inside Shinjuku Gyoen, Shinjuku District, Tokyo, Japan. The Yoyogi skyline in the background reflects the large pond. Shinjuku Gyoen is the most popular park in Tokyo.

It’s one of the techniques used in traditional Japanese gardens. Incorporating scenery, such as mountains and bamboo forests outside the garden, makes it possible to expand the garden’s world and produce a dynamic view.

The borrowed scenery can be man-made objects like castles, and in modern times, skyscrapers have become unintentional scenery for some gardens in cities such as Shinjuku Gyoen.

Comparison of the Japanese Garden and the Western Garden

To better understand it, we will examine the difference between Japanese and Western-style gardens.

Of course, there are many variants in each style. However, we can assume there are some distinctive characteristics between the two.

Here we will list up the principles and characteristics, we will have a clear understanding of it.

Western Style Gardens

The beauty of the Western-style garden lies in its symmetrical beauty, except for the natural scenery style garden, which emerged in the early 18th century in Britain.

They are independent of the buildings, but stand on their own, and geometric patterns, by conscious manipulation, create artificial order, which reminds us of the power of the human.

Japanese Style Gardens

On the contrary, the Japanese style garden is based on mother nature and keeps in harmony with nature, yet consciously manipulates it to create the ideal garden.

They find beauty in asymmetry. Place materials in two-dimensional or three-dimensional relations to make a scalene triangle. This method is also seen in “Kado” (Japanese Flower Arrangement).

Ikebana: Styles of Japanese Flower Arrangement “Kado”

For instance, placing the smaller height plants in front and taller ones in the back gives a sense of distance and depth. Overall, you can say the Japanese style garden pursues to create three-dimensional space from relatively small spaces.

What we have to consider in terms of creating Japanese gardens is you have to take care of them often. Especially in summer, you may have difficulty getting rid of unwanted grasses.

However, that can be a positive point that you can relate to your garden, and the more you take care of them, the better your garden responds to you.

Japanese Garden Pictures for Your Inspiration

Japanese garden with pond

 

Zen garden in Kyoto, Japan

 

Japanese garden with koi fish in a pond

 

Get your Complete Guide to Your Own Japanese Garden! Creating Your Own Japanese Garden by Takashi Sawano

References

日本庭園の特徴 (Traditional Japanese Garden Styles)
池泉?庭石?わかると楽しい!日本庭園の特徴・様式の基礎知識 (Travel.jp)
日本庭園の起源 (okayamakajyu.com)

Hiroko Matsuyama: