Revision as of 13:37, 17 April 2010 editGisling (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers6,469 edits →A concept and early versions← Previous edit | Revision as of 18:36, 18 April 2010 edit undoRJBaran (talk | contribs)253 edits Removed added material that belongs specifically in penjing articleNext edit → | ||
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Container-grown plants, including trees and many other plant types, have a history stretching back at least to the early times of Egyptian culture.<ref name="Bonsai: Its Art, Science, History and Philosophy">{{cite book | author= Koreshoff, Deborah R. | title=Bonsai: Its Art, Science, History and Philosophy | publisher=Timber Press, Inc. | year=1984 | page=1 | isbn=0-88192-389-3 }}</ref> However, the lineage of bonsai derives directly from the Chinese ]. | Container-grown plants, including trees and many other plant types, have a history stretching back at least to the early times of Egyptian culture.<ref name="Bonsai: Its Art, Science, History and Philosophy">{{cite book | author= Koreshoff, Deborah R. | title=Bonsai: Its Art, Science, History and Philosophy | publisher=Timber Press, Inc. | year=1984 | page=1 | isbn=0-88192-389-3 }}</ref> However, the lineage of bonsai derives directly from the Chinese ]. | ||
The practice of growing stylized, transportable plants probably began with Buddhist monks traveling from ancient ] to China. However before, ancient ] physicians in India returned from the Himalayas with shoots from medical trees. By growing them in pots, trimming their branches and cutting back the roots, they were able to keep the trees in a miniature form. The ] is one good example of this. | |||
In the 12th century, Bonsai was known as Vamanatanu Vrikshadi Vidya in India, which translates as the science of dwarfing trees. The first historical reference to penjing is a scroll (see picture at left) from 1200 years ago, documenting a well-developed art form that can be traced back as far as the Han and Qin Dynasties (221 BC to 220 AD). Growing miniature trees in pots and landscapes developed during a time of great wealth of art, architecture, and gardens. A classic period in penjing practice occurred during the Song Dynasty (960 - 1279 AD), at a time when Chinese landscape painting was also at its height. The publication of many penjing manuals during the Qing Dynasty (1644 - 1911 AD) attests to the popularity of the art form. | |||
It is thought that Buddhist monks from China brought penjing with them as they traveled to Japan. Beginning by the 6th century AD, many cultural ideas from China were incorporated into Japanese court life, and for many centuries penjing in Japan retained its Chinese influence. By the 13th century penjing was practiced by many of the Japanese aristocracy and Samurai. As the art form assumed a Japanese identity it became known as hachi-no-ki, which translates as "tree in pot". It wasn't until the 1800's that the term bonsai was adopted in Azakusa Park, a now famous bonsai center near Tokyo. | |||
===A concept and early versions=== | ===A concept and early versions=== | ||
⚫ | Imperial embassy personnel and Buddhist students from Japan had been returning from mainland China with many souvenirs, including an occasional container planting, since the sixth century. At least 17 diplomatic missions were specifically sent from Japan to the Tang court between the years 603 and 839.<ref>{{cite journal | author= Yoshimura, Yuji | title= Modern Bonsai, Development Of The Art Of Bonsai From An Historical Perspective, Part 2 |journal= International Bonsai |year=1991 | number=4| page=37 }}</ref> From about the year 970 comes the first lengthy work of fiction in Japanese, '']'' (''The Tale of the Hollow Tree''), which includes this passage: "A tree that is left growing in its natural state is a crude thing. It is only when it is kept close to human beings who fashion it with loving care that its shape and style acquire the ability to move one." The idea, therefore, was already established by this time that natural beauty becomes true beauty only when modified in accordance with a human ideal.<ref name="Classic Bonsai of Japan">{{cite book | author=Nippon Bonsai Association | title=Classic Bonsai of Japan | publisher=Kodansha International | year=1989 | page=140}}</ref> | ||
] | |||
The earliest example of Chinese penzai can be seen in a mural from a 706 tomb of ] prince Li Xian,in this mural, a court servant held a yellow color round dish with both hands, in this dish, there were a few pebbles and two small plants, with yellow and green fruits. | |||
⚫ | Imperial embassy personnel and Buddhist students from Japan had been returning from mainland China with |
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''Saigyo Monogatari Emaki'' was the earliest known scroll to depict dwarfed potted trees in Japan. | ''Saigyo Monogatari Emaki'' was the earliest known scroll to depict dwarfed potted trees in Japan. | ||
It dates from 1195, although some sources say this dates from 1250. From the year 1309, wooden tray and dish-like pots with dwarf landscapes on modern-looking wooden shelf/benches are shown in the ''Kasuga-gongen-genki'' scroll. These novelties show off the owner's wealth and were probably exotics imported from China.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Paintings/Japanto1600.html |title= Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, to 1600 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | It dates from 1195, although some sources say this dates from 1250. From the year 1309, wooden tray and dish-like pots with dwarf landscapes on modern-looking wooden shelf/benches are shown in the ''Kasuga-gongen-genki'' scroll. These novelties show off the owner's wealth and were probably exotics imported from China.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Paintings/Japanto1600.html |title= Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, to 1600 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
With the extended invasion of the ] into China, many artists and intellectuals found comfortable life and recognition in Japan where ] culture was still actively studied. Chinese ] Buddhist monks came over to teach at monasteries, and one of the monks' activities was to introduce the political leaders of the day to the various arts of miniature landscapes as being the ideal accomplishments for men of taste and learning.<ref name="The Japanese Art of Stone Appreciation, Suiseki and Its Use with Bonsai">{{cite book | author= Covello, Vincent T. and Yuji Yoshimura | title=The Japanese Art of Stone Appreciation, Suiseki and Its Use with Bonsai | publisher=Charles E. Tuttle | year=1984 | page=20}}</ref><ref>Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 144</ref> | |||
The c.1300 ] essay, ''Bonseki no Fu'' (''Tribute to Bonseki'') written by celebrated priest and master of Chinese poetry, ] (1278–1346), outlined the aesthetic principles for what would be termed bonsai, ] and garden architecture itself. At first, the Japanese used miniaturized trees grown in containers to decorate their homes and gardens.<ref name=Smaller Is Better, Japan's Mastery of the Miniature ( Chijimi shikoo no Nihonjin )>{{cite book | author=Yi, O-nyoung | title=Smaller Is Better, Japan's Mastery of the Miniature ( Chijimi shikoo no Nihonjin ) | publisher=Kodansha International, Ltd. | year=1982; First English edition 1984 | page=89}}</ref><ref>Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 144</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Del Tredici, Peter | title= Early American Bonsai: The Larz Anderson Collection of the Arnold Arboretum |journal= Arnoldia |year=1989| number=Summer }}</ref> | The c.1300 ] essay, ''Bonseki no Fu'' (''Tribute to Bonseki'') written by celebrated priest and master of Chinese poetry, ] (1278–1346), outlined the aesthetic principles for what would be termed bonsai, ] and garden architecture itself. At first, the Japanese used miniaturized trees grown in containers to decorate their homes and gardens.<ref name=Smaller Is Better, Japan's Mastery of the Miniature ( Chijimi shikoo no Nihonjin )>{{cite book | author=Yi, O-nyoung | title=Smaller Is Better, Japan's Mastery of the Miniature ( Chijimi shikoo no Nihonjin ) | publisher=Kodansha International, Ltd. | year=1982; First English edition 1984 | page=89}}</ref><ref>Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 144</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Del Tredici, Peter | title= Early American Bonsai: The Larz Anderson Collection of the Arnold Arboretum |journal= Arnoldia |year=1989| number=Summer }}</ref> | ||
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Criticism of the interest in curiously twisted specimens of potted plants shows up in one chapter of the 243 chapter compilation, '']'' (c.1331). (This work would be a sacred teaching handed down from master to student through a limited chain of poets (some famous) until it was at last widely published in the early 17th century. The criticism only had a modest influence on dwarf potted tree culture before then.) | Criticism of the interest in curiously twisted specimens of potted plants shows up in one chapter of the 243 chapter compilation, '']'' (c.1331). (This work would be a sacred teaching handed down from master to student through a limited chain of poets (some famous) until it was at last widely published in the early 17th century. The criticism only had a modest influence on dwarf potted tree culture before then.) | ||
In 1351, dwarf trees were displayed on short poles as portrayed in the ''Boki Ekotoba'' scroll.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Paintings/Japanto1600.html |title= Japanese Paintings: to 1600 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> Potted landscape arrangements made during the next hundred years or so included figurines after the Chinese fashion in order to add scale and theme. These miniatures would eventually be considered garnishes decidedly to be excluded by Japanese artists who were simplifying their creations in the spirit of ] Buddhism.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.artofbonsai.org/feature_articles/mudman.php | author= Redding, Myron | title= Art of the Mud Man |publisher=Art of Bonsai | accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | In 1351, dwarf trees were displayed on short poles as portrayed in the ''Boki Ekotoba'' scroll.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Paintings/Japanto1600.html |title= Japanese Paintings: to 1600 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> Several other scrolls and paintings also included depictions of these kinds of trees. Potted landscape arrangements made during the next hundred years or so included figurines after the Chinese fashion in order to add scale and theme. These miniatures would eventually be considered garnishes decidedly to be excluded by Japanese artists who were simplifying their creations in the spirit of ] Buddhism.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.artofbonsai.org/feature_articles/mudman.php | author= Redding, Myron | title= Art of the Mud Man |publisher=Art of Bonsai | accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
===Hachi-no-ki=== | ===Hachi-no-ki=== | ||
⚫ | ''Hachi-No-Ki'' (''The Potted Trees'') was a ] play by ] (1363–1444), based on a story from c.1383 about an impoverished samurai who sacrificed his three last dwarf potted trees to provide warmth for a traveling monk on a winter night. The monk was an official in disguise who later rewards the samurai by giving him three lands whose names include the names of the three types of trees put to the flame: ''ume'' (plum), ''matsu'' (pine) and ''sakura'' (cherry). At this time, the term for dwarf potted trees was "the bowl's tree" (鉢の木, ''hachi-no-ki'' <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Terms/Hachinoki.html |title= Hachi-No-Ki |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai | accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> ). This denoted the use of a fairly deep pot. | ||
⚫ | ''Hachi-No-Ki'' (''The Potted Trees'') was a ] play by ] (1363–1444), based on a story from c.1383 about an impoverished samurai who sacrificed his three last dwarf potted trees to provide warmth for a traveling monk on a winter night. The monk was an official in disguise who later rewards the samurai by giving him three lands whose names include the names of the three types of trees put to the flame: ''ume'' (plum), ''matsu'' (pine) and ''sakura'' (cherry). At this time, the term for dwarf potted trees was "the bowl's tree" (鉢の木, ''hachi-no-ki'' <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Terms/Hachinoki.html |title= Hachi-No-Ki |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai | accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> ) This denoted the use of a fairly deep pot. | ||
In later centuries, numerous woodblock prints by several artists would depict this popular drama and there would even be a design of fabric by that name. | In later centuries, numerous woodblock prints by several artists would depict this popular drama and there would even be a design of fabric by that name. | ||
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In the ] era (1781–88), an exhibit of traditional dwarf potted pines was begun to be held every year in ]. Connoisseurs from five provinces and the neighboring areas would bring one or two plants each to the show in order to submit them to visitors for ranking.<ref>{{cite book | author= Nippon Bonsai Association, pp. 151-152}}</ref> | In the ] era (1781–88), an exhibit of traditional dwarf potted pines was begun to be held every year in ]. Connoisseurs from five provinces and the neighboring areas would bring one or two plants each to the show in order to submit them to visitors for ranking.<ref>{{cite book | author= Nippon Bonsai Association, pp. 151-152}}</ref> | ||
=== |
===The rise of classical bonsai=== | ||
⚫ | A group of scholars of Chinese arts gathered in the early nineteenth century in ] (near Osaka) to discuss recent styles in the art of miniature trees. Their version of these, which had been previously called "Bunjin Ueki," "Bunjin Hachiue," or other terms, was renamed as "bonsai" (the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese term ]). This term had the connotation of a shallower container in which the Japanese could now more successfully style small trees. The term "bonsai," however, would be not become regularly used in describing their dwarf potted trees for nearly a century. Many others terms and compositions adopted by this group would be derived from ''Kai-shi-en Gaden,'' the Japanese version of ''].''<ref>{{cite book | author= Koreshoff, pp. 7-8}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Naka, John | title= Bunjin-Gi or Bunjin Bonsai |journal=Bonsai in California |year=1989| volume=23| page=48 }}</ref><ref name="The Japanese Art of Stone Appreciation, Suiseki and Its Use with Bonsai">{{cite book | author=Covello, Vincent T. and Yuji Yoshimura| title= The Japanese Art of Stone Appreciation, Suiseki and Its Use with Bonsai | publisher= Charles E. Tuttle | year=1984 | page=25}}</ref><ref name="All-Japan: The Catalogue of Everything Japanese">{{cite book | author=Dalby, Liza et al (ed.) | title= All-Japan: The Catalogue of Everything Japanese | publisher=Quarto Marketing, Inc. | year=1984 | page=44}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | A group of scholars of Chinese arts gathered in ] (near Osaka) to discuss recent styles in the art of miniature trees. Their version of these, which had been previously called "Bunjin Ueki" |
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In 1829, small ''tako-tsuki'' (octopus-styled) trees with long, wavy-branches began to be offered by a grower in ] Park, a north-eastern Edo suburb. Within 20 years that neighborhood would be crowded with nurseries selling bonsai.<ref name="Dwarf Trees ( Bonsai )">{{cite book | author= Nozaki, Shinobu | title= Dwarf Trees ( Bonsai ) | publisher=Sanseido Company, Ltd.| year= 1940| pages=25–26}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= O'Connell, Jean | title= The Art of Bonsai |journal= Science Digest |year=1970| number=March | page=38 }}</ref> The three-volume ''Kinsei-Jufu,'' possibly the first catalog of bonsai, tools, and pots dates from 1833.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Books/18001849.html |title= Bonsai Books 1800 to 1840 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | In 1829, the most significant book that first established classical bonsai art,''Somoku Kinyo Shu'' (''A Colorful Collection of Trees and Plants''/''Collection of tree leaves'') was published. It includes the basic criteria, in detail and with illustrations, for the ideal form of the classical pine bonsai.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Books/18001849.html |title= Bonsai Books 1800 to 1840 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-19}}</ref> That same year, small ''tako-tsuki'' (octopus-styled) trees with long, wavy-branches began to be offered by a grower in ] Park, a north-eastern Edo suburb. Within 20 years that neighborhood would be crowded with nurseries selling bonsai.<ref name="Dwarf Trees ( Bonsai )">{{cite book | author= Nozaki, Shinobu | title= Dwarf Trees ( Bonsai ) | publisher=Sanseido Company, Ltd.| year= 1940| pages=25–26}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= O'Connell, Jean | title= The Art of Bonsai |journal= Science Digest |year=1970| number=March | page=38 }}</ref> The three-volume ''Kinsei-Jufu,'' possibly the first catalog of bonsai, tools, and pots dates from 1833.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Books/18001849.html |title= Bonsai Books 1800 to 1840 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
Numerous artists of the nineteenth century had dwarf potted trees depicted in a few of their woodblock prints, including Yoshishige (who pictured each of the fifty-three classic stations of the ] as miniature landscape) and ] (who included mostly ''hachi-no-ki'' in some four dozen prints).<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Paintings/Japan1800to1868.html |title= Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, 1800 to 1868 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> The earliest known photograph from Japan which included a dwarf potted tree dates from c.1861 by ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/1899Refs/Rossier.html |title= Earliest Known Photograph from Japan which includes a Dwarf Potted Tree by Pierre Rossier, c.1861 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | Numerous artists of the nineteenth century had dwarf potted trees depicted in a few of their woodblock prints, including Yoshishige (who pictured each of the fifty-three classic stations of the ] as miniature landscape) and ] (who included mostly ''hachi-no-ki'' in some four dozen prints).<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Paintings/Japan1800to1868.html |title= Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, 1800 to 1868 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> The earliest known photograph from Japan which included a dwarf potted tree dates from c.1861 by ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/1899Refs/Rossier.html |title= Earliest Known Photograph from Japan which includes a Dwarf Potted Tree by Pierre Rossier, c.1861 |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | ===The rise of |
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On October 13, 1868, the ] moved to his new capital in ]. Bonsai were used for display both inside and outside Meiji Palace, and ever since have played important role in affairs of the Palace. The necessary requirement for bonsai placed in such large surroundings as the Imperial Palace was that they be "Giant Bonsai," large enough to fill the grand space.<ref>{{cite journal | author= Yamada, Tomio | title= Fundamentals of Wiring Bonsai |journal=International Bonsai |year=2005| number=4| pages=10–11 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Hill, Warren | title= Reflections on Japan |journal= NBF Bulletin |year=2000| volume=XI| number 2 | page=5 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.bonsai-wbff.org/shimpaku/shim2.shtml |author= Yamanaka, Kazuki |title= The Shimpaku Juniper: Its Secret History, Chapter II. First Shimpaku: Ishizuchi Shimpaku |publisher=World Bonsai Friendship Federation |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> The ] encouraged interest in bonsai. Government officials who did not appreciate bonsai felt out of place and soon members of the entire ministry had bonsai whether they liked it or not. Prince Itoh was exception: any bonsai which the emperor gave him were then given to Kijoji Itoh, a statesman of great influence behind-the-scenes and a noted bonsai collector who conducted many scientific researches and experiments concerning these dwarf potted trees beyond the imagination of his day.<ref>{{cite book | author= Nozaki, pg. 24}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Itoh, Yoshimi | title= Bonsai Origins |journal= ABS Bonsai Journal |year=1969| volume=3 | number=1| page=3 }}</ref> | On October 13, 1868, the ] moved to his new capital in ]. Bonsai were used for display both inside and outside Meiji Palace, and ever since have played important role in affairs of the Palace. The necessary requirement for bonsai placed in such large surroundings as the Imperial Palace was that they be "Giant Bonsai," large enough to fill the grand space.<ref>{{cite journal | author= Yamada, Tomio | title= Fundamentals of Wiring Bonsai |journal=International Bonsai |year=2005| number=4| pages=10–11 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Hill, Warren | title= Reflections on Japan |journal= NBF Bulletin |year=2000| volume=XI| number 2 | page=5 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.bonsai-wbff.org/shimpaku/shim2.shtml |author= Yamanaka, Kazuki |title= The Shimpaku Juniper: Its Secret History, Chapter II. First Shimpaku: Ishizuchi Shimpaku |publisher=World Bonsai Friendship Federation |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> The ] encouraged interest in bonsai. Government officials who did not appreciate bonsai felt out of place and soon members of the entire ministry had bonsai whether they liked it or not. Prince Itoh was exception: any bonsai which the emperor gave him were then given to Kijoji Itoh, a statesman of great influence behind-the-scenes and a noted bonsai collector who conducted many scientific researches and experiments concerning these dwarf potted trees beyond the imagination of his day.<ref>{{cite book | author= Nozaki, pg. 24}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Itoh, Yoshimi | title= Bonsai Origins |journal= ABS Bonsai Journal |year=1969| volume=3 | number=1| page=3 }}</ref> | ||
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Caretaker of the Imperial bonsai collection, Kyuzo Murata (1902–1991), was one of very few persons allowed to take care of bonsai during the Pacific War. He gathered together and preserved many trees from the other Omiya growers and would water them under the protection of night. Throughout 1945, many old trees were the smallest casualties of the spring and summer napalm ] (esp. March 9/10) and sixty-six other cities. Gardeners protected the Imperial collection trees from fire by pouring water over them after the Palace had been bombed on May 25/26. Following the ], there was begun the post-war re-evaluation and reviving of damaged collections of trees—including the Imperial—which would continue for over a decade as the economically and psychically devastated Japan was rebuilt. Many of the Omiya growers did not continue their vocation. During the Allied ] (through 1952) U.S. officers and their wives could take courses in bonsai, ], ], and other traditional arts and crafts as arranged by ]'s headquarters. Many of the older and limited varieties of trees were no longer available, and the bonsai considered in fashion changed partly because of this shortage. Copper wire now largely replaced ordinary iron wire for shaping the better trees, but the latter still would be used for mass-produced commercial bonsai.<ref>{{cite book | author= Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 154}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/KMurata.html |title= Kyuzo Murata, the Father of Modern Bonsai in Japan |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BigPicture/PostWarJapan.html |title= Some of the Serious Conditions in Japan After World War II |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Hill, pg. 5}}</ref> | Caretaker of the Imperial bonsai collection, Kyuzo Murata (1902–1991), was one of very few persons allowed to take care of bonsai during the Pacific War. He gathered together and preserved many trees from the other Omiya growers and would water them under the protection of night. Throughout 1945, many old trees were the smallest casualties of the spring and summer napalm ] (esp. March 9/10) and sixty-six other cities. Gardeners protected the Imperial collection trees from fire by pouring water over them after the Palace had been bombed on May 25/26. Following the ], there was begun the post-war re-evaluation and reviving of damaged collections of trees—including the Imperial—which would continue for over a decade as the economically and psychically devastated Japan was rebuilt. Many of the Omiya growers did not continue their vocation. During the Allied ] (through 1952) U.S. officers and their wives could take courses in bonsai, ], ], and other traditional arts and crafts as arranged by ]'s headquarters. Many of the older and limited varieties of trees were no longer available, and the bonsai considered in fashion changed partly because of this shortage. Copper wire now largely replaced ordinary iron wire for shaping the better trees, but the latter still would be used for mass-produced commercial bonsai.<ref>{{cite book | author= Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 154}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/KMurata.html |title= Kyuzo Murata, the Father of Modern Bonsai in Japan |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BigPicture/PostWarJapan.html |title= Some of the Serious Conditions in Japan After World War II |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author= Hill, pg. 5}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | ===The rise of modern bonsai=== | ||
The Kokufu-ten displays were restarted again in 1947 after a four year cancellation and these now annual prestigious exhibits of some of the very best bonsai in Japan, by invitation only and for eight days in February, continue to this day.<ref name="Kokufu Bonsai Ten Shows"/> In 1952, Yuji Yoshimura, son of a leader in the bonsai world, collaborated with German diplomat and author Alfred Koehn to give demonstrations and the first formal bonsai courses opened to the public and outsiders in Tokyo. (Koehn's 1937 ''Japanese Tray Landscapes'' had been published in English in Peking.) Yoshimura's 1957 book in English written with one of his students and which |
The Kokufu-ten displays were restarted again in 1947 after a four year cancellation and these now annual prestigious exhibits of some of the very best bonsai in Japan, by invitation only and for eight days in February, continue to this day.<ref name="Kokufu Bonsai Ten Shows"/> In 1952, Yuji Yoshimura, son of a leader in the bonsai world, collaborated with German diplomat and author Alfred Koehn to give demonstrations and the first formal bonsai courses opened to the public and outsiders in Tokyo. (Koehn's 1937 ''Japanese Tray Landscapes'' had been published in English in Peking.) Yoshimura's 1957 book in English written with one of his students and which set easy classifications for many facets of the art, would go on to be called the “classic Japanese bonsai bible for westerners” and see over thirty printings.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/JYNBioYY.html |title= Yuji Yoshimura, the Father of Popular Bonsai in the Non-Oriental World |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> (These style classifications would be more strictly followed in the West – right, wrong or indifferent – than Japanese artists and teachers ever intended.) Other less influential works in Japanese and English had been published by this time, and afterward a tremendous number of books saw print. Translations and original volumes in over two dozen languages were published in the next few decades.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Books/Books.html |title= The Books on Bonsai and Related Arts |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> The number of clubs increased outside of Asia once Japanese no longer was held to be the required language and interaction increased between members of all levels of experience. | ||
Kawamoto and Kurihara's ''Bonsai-Saikei'' described tray landscapes made with younger material than was traditionally used because of the relative lack of old large plants, mostly from Pacific War damages. This book was published in an English translation in 1963. | Kawamoto and Kurihara's ''Bonsai-Saikei'' described tray landscapes made with younger material than was traditionally used because of the relative lack of old large plants, mostly from Pacific War damages. This book was published in an English translation in 1963. | ||
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A great exhibition was held by the private Kokufu Bonsai Association reorganized into the Nippon Bonsai Association in Hibya Park to mark the ] in October 1964 and a commemorative album Gems of Bonsai and Suiseki published in Japanese and English. | A great exhibition was held by the private Kokufu Bonsai Association reorganized into the Nippon Bonsai Association in Hibya Park to mark the ] in October 1964 and a commemorative album Gems of Bonsai and Suiseki published in Japanese and English. | ||
In 1967 the first group of Westerners studied at an |
In 1967 the first group of Westerners studied at an Ōmiya nursery. Returning to the U.S. these people established the American Bonsai Society. Other groups and individuals from outside Asia then visited and studied at the various Japanese nurseries, occasionally even apprenticing under the masters. These visitors brought back to their local clubs the latest techniques and stylings which were then further disseminated. Japanese teachers would also travel widely abroad to every continent except Antarctica.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/KMurata.html |title= Kyuzo Murata, the Father of Modern Bonsai in Japan |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/JYNBioSK.html |title= Saburō Katō, International Bridge-builder, His Heritage and Legacy |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/JYNBioYY.html |title= Yuji Yoshimura, the Father of Popular Bonsai in the Non-Oriental World |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
A large display of bonsai and suiseki was held as part of ], and formal discussion was made of an international association of enthusiasts. Three monthly magazines were started this year: ''Bonsai Sekai,'' ''Satsuki Kenkyu,'' and ''Shizen to Bonsai.'' | A large display of bonsai and suiseki was held as part of ], and formal discussion was made of an international association of enthusiasts. Three monthly magazines were started this year: ''Bonsai Sekai,'' ''Satsuki Kenkyu,'' and ''Shizen to Bonsai.'' | ||
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The First World Bonsai Convention was held in Osaka during the World Bonsai and Suiseki Exhibition in 1980.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Days/DaysApr.html, April 19 |title= Bonsai Book of Days for April |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> Nine years later, the first World Bonsai Convention was held in Omiya and the World Bonsai Friendship Federation (WBFF) was inaugurated. (These conventions with several hundreds of participants from dozens of countries would then be held every four years at different locations around the globe: 1993, Orlando, Florida; 1997, Seoul, Korea; 2001, Munich, Germany; 2005, Washington, D.C.; 2009, San Juan, Puerto Rico.)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Days/DaysApr.html, April 6 |title= Bonsai Book of Days for April |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Convention2.html |title= The Conventions, Symposia & Lectures/Demos |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | The First World Bonsai Convention was held in Osaka during the World Bonsai and Suiseki Exhibition in 1980.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Days/DaysApr.html, April 19 |title= Bonsai Book of Days for April |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> Nine years later, the first World Bonsai Convention was held in Omiya and the World Bonsai Friendship Federation (WBFF) was inaugurated. (These conventions with several hundreds of participants from dozens of countries would then be held every four years at different locations around the globe: 1993, Orlando, Florida; 1997, Seoul, Korea; 2001, Munich, Germany; 2005, Washington, D.C.; 2009, San Juan, Puerto Rico.)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Days/DaysApr.html, April 6 |title= Bonsai Book of Days for April |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Convention2.html |title= The Conventions, Symposia & Lectures/Demos |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
There are now over twelve hundred books on bonsai and the related arts in at least twenty-six languages available to the enthusiasts in over ninety countries and territories.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Books/Books.html |title= The Books on Bonsai and Related Arts |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BigPicture/Nations.html |title= The Nations -- When Did Bonsai Come to the Various Countries and Territories? |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> A few dozen magazines in over thirteen languages are in print.<ref name="Phoenix Bonsai"/> Several score of club newsletters are available on-line, and there are at least that many forums and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Newsletter.html |title= Club Newsletter On-Line |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> Educational videos and just the appearance of dwarf potted trees in films and on television reach a wide audience.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BoldlyGrow.html |title= To Boldly Grow: Some Celluloid Bonsai (An Overview)|publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> There are perhaps hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts in over a thousand clubs and associations worldwide and an unknown number of unassociated hobbyists also practice bonsai to some extent from the level of novice to master. Plant material from every location is being trained into bonsai and occasionally displayed at local, regional, national, and international conventions and exhibitions for enthusiasts and the general public. Nurseries and potters around the globe provide new material and creativity for this evolving art/hobby.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BigPicture/Pots.html |title= About Bonsai Pots and Potters |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | There are now over twelve hundred books on bonsai and the related arts in at least twenty-six languages available to the enthusiasts in over ninety countries and territories.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Books/Books.html |title= The Books on Bonsai and Related Arts |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BigPicture/Nations.html |title= The Nations -- When Did Bonsai Come to the Various Countries and Territories? |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> A few dozen magazines in over thirteen languages are in print.<ref name="Phoenix Bonsai"/> Several score of club newsletters are available on-line, and there are at least that many discussion forums and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/Newsletter.html |title= Club Newsletter On-Line |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> Educational videos and just the appearance of dwarf potted trees in films and on television reach a wide audience.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BoldlyGrow.html |title= To Boldly Grow: Some Celluloid Bonsai (An Overview)|publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> There are perhaps hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts in over a thousand clubs and associations worldwide and an unknown number of unassociated hobbyists also practice bonsai to some extent from the level of novice to master. Plant material from every location is being trained into bonsai and occasionally displayed at local, regional, national, and international conventions and exhibitions for enthusiasts and the general public. Nurseries and potters around the globe provide new material and creativity for this evolving art/hobby.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.phoenixbonsai.com/BigPicture/Pots.html |title= About Bonsai Pots and Potters |publisher=Phoenix Bonsai |date= |accessdate=2010-04-07}}</ref> | ||
== Cultivation == | == Cultivation == |
Revision as of 18:36, 18 April 2010
For other uses, see Bonsai (disambiguation).error: {{nihongo}}: Japanese or romaji text required (help) (盆栽 Japanese) (lit. tray cultivation) is the art of growing trees, or woody plants shaped as trees, in containers. Bonsai is sometimes confused with dwarfing, but dwarfing more accurately refers to researching and creating cultivars of plant material that are permanent, genetic miniatures of existing species. Bonsai does not require genetically dwarfed trees, but rather depends on growing small trees from regular stock and seeds. Bonsai uses cultivation techniques like pruning, root reduction, potting, defoliation, and grafting to produce small trees that mimic the shape and style of mature, full-sized trees.
The purposes of bonsai are primarily contemplation (for the viewer) and the pleasant exercise of effort and ingenuity (for the grower). By contrast with other plant-related practices, bonsai is not intended for production of food, for medicine, or for creating yard-sized or park-sized landscapes. As a result, the scope of bonsai practice is narrow and focused on long-term cultivation and shaping of one or more small trees in a single container.
'Bonsai' is a Japanese pronunciation of the earlier Chinese term penzai (盆栽). A 'bon' is a tray-like pot typically used in bonsai culture. The word bonsai is sometimes used as an umbrella term for all miniature trees in containers or pots, but this article focuses primarily on bonsai as defined in the Japanese tradition. Similar practices in other cultures include the Chinese tradition of penjing and the miniature living landscapes of Vietnamese hòn non bộ.
History
Container-grown plants, including trees and many other plant types, have a history stretching back at least to the early times of Egyptian culture. However, the lineage of bonsai derives directly from the Chinese penjing.
A concept and early versions
Imperial embassy personnel and Buddhist students from Japan had been returning from mainland China with many souvenirs, including an occasional container planting, since the sixth century. At least 17 diplomatic missions were specifically sent from Japan to the Tang court between the years 603 and 839. From about the year 970 comes the first lengthy work of fiction in Japanese, Utsubo monogatari (The Tale of the Hollow Tree), which includes this passage: "A tree that is left growing in its natural state is a crude thing. It is only when it is kept close to human beings who fashion it with loving care that its shape and style acquire the ability to move one." The idea, therefore, was already established by this time that natural beauty becomes true beauty only when modified in accordance with a human ideal.
Saigyo Monogatari Emaki was the earliest known scroll to depict dwarfed potted trees in Japan. It dates from 1195, although some sources say this dates from 1250. From the year 1309, wooden tray and dish-like pots with dwarf landscapes on modern-looking wooden shelf/benches are shown in the Kasuga-gongen-genki scroll. These novelties show off the owner's wealth and were probably exotics imported from China.
With the extended invasion of the Mongol Empire into China, many artists and intellectuals found comfortable life and recognition in Japan where Song dynasty culture was still actively studied. Chinese Chan Buddhist monks came over to teach at monasteries, and one of the monks' activities was to introduce the political leaders of the day to the various arts of miniature landscapes as being the ideal accomplishments for men of taste and learning.
The c.1300 rhymed prose essay, Bonseki no Fu (Tribute to Bonseki) written by celebrated priest and master of Chinese poetry, Kokan Shiren (1278–1346), outlined the aesthetic principles for what would be termed bonsai, bonseki and garden architecture itself. At first, the Japanese used miniaturized trees grown in containers to decorate their homes and gardens.Cite error: The <ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page).
Criticism of the interest in curiously twisted specimens of potted plants shows up in one chapter of the 243 chapter compilation, Tsurezuregusa (c.1331). (This work would be a sacred teaching handed down from master to student through a limited chain of poets (some famous) until it was at last widely published in the early 17th century. The criticism only had a modest influence on dwarf potted tree culture before then.)
In 1351, dwarf trees were displayed on short poles as portrayed in the Boki Ekotoba scroll. Several other scrolls and paintings also included depictions of these kinds of trees. Potted landscape arrangements made during the next hundred years or so included figurines after the Chinese fashion in order to add scale and theme. These miniatures would eventually be considered garnishes decidedly to be excluded by Japanese artists who were simplifying their creations in the spirit of Zen Buddhism.
Hachi-no-ki
Hachi-No-Ki (The Potted Trees) was a Noh play by Zeami Motokiyo (1363–1444), based on a story from c.1383 about an impoverished samurai who sacrificed his three last dwarf potted trees to provide warmth for a traveling monk on a winter night. The monk was an official in disguise who later rewards the samurai by giving him three lands whose names include the names of the three types of trees put to the flame: ume (plum), matsu (pine) and sakura (cherry). At this time, the term for dwarf potted trees was "the bowl's tree" (鉢の木, hachi-no-ki ). This denoted the use of a fairly deep pot. In later centuries, numerous woodblock prints by several artists would depict this popular drama and there would even be a design of fabric by that name.
Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu (r. 1623-1651) was a hachi-no-ki enthusiast. A story tells of Okubo Hikozemon (1560–1639), councilor to the shogun, who threw one of Iemitsu's favorite trees away in the garden—right in front of the shogun in order to dissuade him from spending so much time and attention on these trees. In spite of the servant's efforts, Iemitsu never gave up this art form which he continued to love. (There is also a different tale from this time of a samurai's gardener who killed himself when his master insulted a hachi-no-ki of which the artisan was especially proud.) One of the oldest-known living bonsai trees, considered one of the National Treasures of Japan, is in the Tokyo Imperial Palace collection. A five-needle pine (Pinus pentaphylla var. negishi) known as Sandai-Shogun-No Matsu is documented as having been cared for by Tokugawa Iemitsu. The tree is considered to be at least 500 years old and was first trained as a bonsai by the year 1610. Older plants have been made more recently into bonsai as well.
The earliest known report by a Westerner of a Japanese dwarf potted tree was made in 1692.
Chinese containers exported to Japan during the 17th and 18th centuries would become referred to as Kowatari (old crossing). These were made between 1465 and about 1800. Many came from Yixing in Jiangsu province—unglazed and usually purplish-brown—and some others from around Canton, particularly during the Ming dynasty. Miniature potted trees were called hachi-ue in a 1681 horticulture book which also stated that everyone at the time grew azaleas, even if the poorest people had to use an abalone shell as a container. Torii Kiyoharu's use of woodblock printing in Japan depicted the dwarf potted trees from horticultural expert Itō Ihei's nursery.
In the Tenmei era (1781–88), an exhibit of traditional dwarf potted pines was begun to be held every year in Kyoto. Connoisseurs from five provinces and the neighboring areas would bring one or two plants each to the show in order to submit them to visitors for ranking.
The rise of classical bonsai
A group of scholars of Chinese arts gathered in the early nineteenth century in Itami, Hyogo (near Osaka) to discuss recent styles in the art of miniature trees. Their version of these, which had been previously called "Bunjin Ueki," "Bunjin Hachiue," or other terms, was renamed as "bonsai" (the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese term penzai). This term had the connotation of a shallower container in which the Japanese could now more successfully style small trees. The term "bonsai," however, would be not become regularly used in describing their dwarf potted trees for nearly a century. Many others terms and compositions adopted by this group would be derived from Kai-shi-en Gaden, the Japanese version of Jieziyuan Huazhuan.
In 1829, the most significant book that first established classical bonsai art,Somoku Kinyo Shu (A Colorful Collection of Trees and Plants/Collection of tree leaves) was published. It includes the basic criteria, in detail and with illustrations, for the ideal form of the classical pine bonsai. That same year, small tako-tsuki (octopus-styled) trees with long, wavy-branches began to be offered by a grower in Asakusa Park, a north-eastern Edo suburb. Within 20 years that neighborhood would be crowded with nurseries selling bonsai. The three-volume Kinsei-Jufu, possibly the first catalog of bonsai, tools, and pots dates from 1833.
Numerous artists of the nineteenth century had dwarf potted trees depicted in a few of their woodblock prints, including Yoshishige (who pictured each of the fifty-three classic stations of the Tokaido (road) as miniature landscape) and Kunisada (who included mostly hachi-no-ki in some four dozen prints). The earliest known photograph from Japan which included a dwarf potted tree dates from c.1861 by Pierre Rossier.
On October 13, 1868, the Meiji Emperor moved to his new capital in Tokyo. Bonsai were used for display both inside and outside Meiji Palace, and ever since have played important role in affairs of the Palace. The necessary requirement for bonsai placed in such large surroundings as the Imperial Palace was that they be "Giant Bonsai," large enough to fill the grand space. The Meiji Emperor encouraged interest in bonsai. Government officials who did not appreciate bonsai felt out of place and soon members of the entire ministry had bonsai whether they liked it or not. Prince Itoh was exception: any bonsai which the emperor gave him were then given to Kijoji Itoh, a statesman of great influence behind-the-scenes and a noted bonsai collector who conducted many scientific researches and experiments concerning these dwarf potted trees beyond the imagination of his day.
By the late 1860s, thick combed and wetted hemp fibers were being used to roughly shape the trunk and branches of miniature trees by pulling and tying them. The process was tedious and bothersome, and the final product was unsightly. Tips of branches would only be opened flat. Long, wavy-branched tako (octopus) style trees were mass-produced and designed in the Tokyo for the increasing foreign trade, while the more subtle and delicate bunjin-style trees designed in Kyoto and Osaka were for use in Japan. Tokyo preferred big trunks out of proportion and did not approve of Kyoto's finely-designed slender trunks. (This old cultural rivalry would continue for a century.) Pots exported from China between 1816 and 1911 (especially the late 1800s) were called Nakawatari (middle-crossing) or Chuwatari. Shallow, rectangular or oval shaped stoneware with carved feet and drainage holes, unglazed pots of this type were used at ancestral shrines and treasured by the Chinese. After the mid-century, certain Japanese antiquities dealers originally imported these and instant popular approval for this type of container for bonsai created a huge demand for incense burners of this type. Consequently, orders came from Japan to Yixing pottery centers specifically to make bonsai pots.
Japanese participation in various international exhibitions introduced many in the U.S. and Europe to dwarf potted trees—and specimens from the displays went into Western hands following the closing of the fairs. Japanese immigrants to the U.S. West Coast and Hawaii Territory brought plants or experience with them. Export nurseries, most notably the Yokohama Gardeners Association, provided increasingly good quality dwarf potted trees for persons in the U.S. and Europe who wanted these—even if the buyers did not have enough information or experience to actually keep the trees alive long-term.
An Artistic Bonsai Concours was held in Tokyo in 1892 followed by the publication of a three-volume commemorative picture book. This demonstrated a new tendency to see bonsai as an independent art form. In 1903, the Tokyo association Jurakukai held showings of bonsai and ikebana at two Japanese-style restaurants. Three years later, Bonsai Gaho (till c.1913), became possibly the first monthly magazine on the subject. By 1907, "on the outskirts of Tokio tree artists have formed a little colony of from twenty to thirty houses, and from this centre their work find its way to all parts of the world." "Its secrets are handed down from father to son in a few families, and are guarded with scrupulous care."
Count Okuma (1838–1922) maintained a famed collection of dwarf pines and dwarf plum trees.
In 1910, wiring techniques were described in the Sanyu-en Bonsai-Dan (History of Bonsai in the Sanyu nursery). Zinc-galvanized steel wire was initially used. Expensive copper wire was only used for trees which had real potential. Between 1911 and about 1940, mass-produced containers were exported from Yixing, China and made to the specifications of Japanese dealers. These were called Shinto (new crossing or arrival) or Shin-watare. These were made for increasing numbers of enthusiasts. Some containers, including primitive style ones, were also being made in Formosa.
By 1914, "at the N.E. corner of Shiba Park is a permanent bazaar (the first of its kind established in Tokyo) where hosts of native-made gimcracks can be bought at fixed prices. The exhibits of potted plants and dwarf trees held here from time to time attract lovers of such things." Also this year, the first national annual bonsai show was held (through 1933) in Tokyo's Hibiya Park. During this period, the tokonoma in formal rooms and tea rooms became the main place for bonsai display. The shaped trees now shared space with other items such as scrolls, incense burners, Buddhist statues and tea ceremony implements.
The first issue of Bonsai magazine was published in 1921 by Norio Kobayashi (1889–1972). This influential periodical would run for 518 consecutive issues. Copper wire was begun to be extensively used by this time. Major changing of the shape of trees could now be accomplished because of the use of wiring. Trees could be precisely and aesthetically wired, and then sold immediately. A greater number of both collected and nursery trees could now be trained for bonsai. The number of hobbyists would increase due to the increased ability to style with wire, but there was also an increase in damaged or scarred trees.
The 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake and resulting fire devastated Tokyo, and gutted the downtown area. Of interest here is the fact that this was where many bonsai were grown. And so two years later, a group of thirty families of downtown Tokyo professional growers established the Ōmiya Bonsai Village, northeast of the capital. The first great annual public exhibition of trees was held at the Asahi Newspaper Hall in Tokyo in 1927. The first of the very prestigious Kokufu-ten exhibitions were held in Tokyo's Ueno Park, beginning in 1934. By the following year, tokonoma display principles were now allowed for bonsai to be shown for the tree's individual beauty, not just for its spiritual or symbolic significance.
Toolsmith Masakuni I (1880–1950) helped design and produce the first steel tools specifically made for the developing requirements of bonsai styling.
By 1940, there were about 300 bonsai dealers in Tokyo, some 150 species of trees were being cultivated, and thousands of specimens annually were shipped to Europe and America. The first major book on the subject in English was published in the Japanese capital: Dwarf Trees (Bonsai) by Shinobu Nozaki (1895–1968). The first bonsai nurseries and clubs in the Americas were started by first and second-generation Japanese immigrants.
Caretaker of the Imperial bonsai collection, Kyuzo Murata (1902–1991), was one of very few persons allowed to take care of bonsai during the Pacific War. He gathered together and preserved many trees from the other Omiya growers and would water them under the protection of night. Throughout 1945, many old trees were the smallest casualties of the spring and summer napalm bombing of Tokyo (esp. March 9/10) and sixty-six other cities. Gardeners protected the Imperial collection trees from fire by pouring water over them after the Palace had been bombed on May 25/26. Following the surrender of Japan, there was begun the post-war re-evaluation and reviving of damaged collections of trees—including the Imperial—which would continue for over a decade as the economically and psychically devastated Japan was rebuilt. Many of the Omiya growers did not continue their vocation. During the Allied Occupation of Japan (through 1952) U.S. officers and their wives could take courses in bonsai, bonkei, ikebana, and other traditional arts and crafts as arranged by General MacArthur's headquarters. Many of the older and limited varieties of trees were no longer available, and the bonsai considered in fashion changed partly because of this shortage. Copper wire now largely replaced ordinary iron wire for shaping the better trees, but the latter still would be used for mass-produced commercial bonsai.
The rise of modern bonsai
The Kokufu-ten displays were restarted again in 1947 after a four year cancellation and these now annual prestigious exhibits of some of the very best bonsai in Japan, by invitation only and for eight days in February, continue to this day. In 1952, Yuji Yoshimura, son of a leader in the bonsai world, collaborated with German diplomat and author Alfred Koehn to give demonstrations and the first formal bonsai courses opened to the public and outsiders in Tokyo. (Koehn's 1937 Japanese Tray Landscapes had been published in English in Peking.) Yoshimura's 1957 book in English written with one of his students and which set easy classifications for many facets of the art, would go on to be called the “classic Japanese bonsai bible for westerners” and see over thirty printings. (These style classifications would be more strictly followed in the West – right, wrong or indifferent – than Japanese artists and teachers ever intended.) Other less influential works in Japanese and English had been published by this time, and afterward a tremendous number of books saw print. Translations and original volumes in over two dozen languages were published in the next few decades. The number of clubs increased outside of Asia once Japanese no longer was held to be the required language and interaction increased between members of all levels of experience.
Kawamoto and Kurihara's Bonsai-Saikei described tray landscapes made with younger material than was traditionally used because of the relative lack of old large plants, mostly from Pacific War damages. This book was published in an English translation in 1963.
A great exhibition was held by the private Kokufu Bonsai Association reorganized into the Nippon Bonsai Association in Hibya Park to mark the Tokyo Olympics in October 1964 and a commemorative album Gems of Bonsai and Suiseki published in Japanese and English.
In 1967 the first group of Westerners studied at an Ōmiya nursery. Returning to the U.S. these people established the American Bonsai Society. Other groups and individuals from outside Asia then visited and studied at the various Japanese nurseries, occasionally even apprenticing under the masters. These visitors brought back to their local clubs the latest techniques and stylings which were then further disseminated. Japanese teachers would also travel widely abroad to every continent except Antarctica.
A large display of bonsai and suiseki was held as part of Expo '70, and formal discussion was made of an international association of enthusiasts. Three monthly magazines were started this year: Bonsai Sekai, Satsuki Kenkyu, and Shizen to Bonsai.
In 1975, first Gafu-ten (Elegant-Style Exhibit) of shohin bonsai (13-25 cm (9.84 in) (5–10 in) tall) was held, and also the first Sakufu-ten (Creative Bonsai Exhibit), the only one where professional bonsai growers can exhibit traditional trees under their own names, organized by Hideo Kato (1918–2001) at Daimaru Department Store in Tokyo.
The First World Bonsai Convention was held in Osaka during the World Bonsai and Suiseki Exhibition in 1980. Nine years later, the first World Bonsai Convention was held in Omiya and the World Bonsai Friendship Federation (WBFF) was inaugurated. (These conventions with several hundreds of participants from dozens of countries would then be held every four years at different locations around the globe: 1993, Orlando, Florida; 1997, Seoul, Korea; 2001, Munich, Germany; 2005, Washington, D.C.; 2009, San Juan, Puerto Rico.)
There are now over twelve hundred books on bonsai and the related arts in at least twenty-six languages available to the enthusiasts in over ninety countries and territories. A few dozen magazines in over thirteen languages are in print. Several score of club newsletters are available on-line, and there are at least that many discussion forums and blogs. Educational videos and just the appearance of dwarf potted trees in films and on television reach a wide audience. There are perhaps hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts in over a thousand clubs and associations worldwide and an unknown number of unassociated hobbyists also practice bonsai to some extent from the level of novice to master. Plant material from every location is being trained into bonsai and occasionally displayed at local, regional, national, and international conventions and exhibitions for enthusiasts and the general public. Nurseries and potters around the globe provide new material and creativity for this evolving art/hobby.
Cultivation
Bonsai can be created from nearly any perennial woody-stemmed tree or shrub species which produces true branches and remains small through pot confinement with crown and root pruning. Some species are popular as bonsai material because they have characteristics, such as small leaves or needles, that make them appropriate for the compact visual scope of bonsai.
Sources of bonsai material
All bonsai start with a specimen of source material, a plant that the grower wishes to train into bonsai form. Bonsai practice is an unusual form of plant cultivation in that growth from seeds is rarely used to obtain source material. To display the characteristic aged appearance of a bonsai within a reasonable time, the source plant is often partially-grown or mature stock. A specimen may be selected specifically for bonsai aesthetic characteristics it already possesses, such as great natural age for a specimen collected in the wild, or a tapered, scar-free trunk from a nursery specimen. Alternatively, it may be selected for non-aesthetic reasons, such as known hardiness for the grower's local climate or low cost (in the case of collected materials).
Propagation
While any form of plant propagation could generate bonsai material, a few techniques are favored because they can quickly produce a relatively mature trunk with well-placed branches.
Cuttings. In taking a cutting, part of a growing plant is cut off and placed in a growing medium to develop roots. If the part that is cut off is fairly thick, like a mature branch, it can be grown into an aged-looking bonsai more quickly than can a seed. Unfortunately, thinner and younger cuttings tend to strike roots more easily than thicker or more mature ones. In bonsai propagation, cuttings usually provide source material to be grown for some time before training.
Layering. Layering is a technique in which rooting is encouraged from part of a plant, usually a branch, while it is still attached to the parent plant. After rooting, the branch is removed from the parent and grown as an independent entity. For bonsai, both ground layering and air layering can create a potential bonsai, by transforming a mature branch into the trunk of a new tree. The point at which rooting is encouraged can be close to the location of side branches, so the resulting rooted tree can immediately have a thick trunk and low branches, characteristics that complement bonsai aesthetics.
Commercial bonsai growers
Commercial bonsai growers may use any of the other means of obtaining starter bonsai material, from seed propagation to collecting expeditions, but they generally sell mature specimens that display bonsai aesthetic qualities already. The grower trains the source specimens to a greater or lesser extent before sale, and the trees may be ready for display as soon as they are bought. Those who purchase commercially-grown bonsai face some challenges, however, particularly of buying from another country. If the purchaser's local climate does not closely match the climate in which the bonsai was created, the plant will have difficulties surviving and thriving. As well, importing living plant material from a foreign source is often closely controlled by customs regulations and may require a license or other special customs arrangement on the buyer's part. If a local commercial bonsai grower does not exist, buying from a distant one may be unsatisfactory.
Nursery stock
A plant nursery is an agricultural operation where (non-bonsai) plants are propagated and grown to usable size. Nursery stock may be available directly from the nursery, or may be sold in a garden centre or similar resale establishment. Nursery stock is usually young but fully viable, and is often potted with sufficient soil to allow plants to survive a season or two before being transplanted into a more permanent location. Because the nursery tree is already pot-conditioned, it can be worked on as a bonsai immediately. The large number of plants that can be viewed in a single visit to a nursery or garden centre allows the buyer to identify plants with better-than-average bonsai characteristics. According to Peter Adams, a nursery visit "offers the opportunity to choose an instant trunk". One issue with nursery stock is that many specimens are shaped into popular forms, such as the standard or half-standard forms, with several feet of clear trunk rising from the roots. Without branches low on the trunk, it is difficult for a source specimen to be trained as bonsai.
Collecting
Collecting bonsai is the process of finding suitable bonsai material in its original wild situation, successfully moving it, and replanting it in a container for development as bonsai. Collecting may involve wild materials collected from naturally treed areas, or cultivated specimens found growing in yards and gardens. Mature landscape plants which are being discarded from a building site can provide excellent material for bonsai. In Great Britain, hedgerow trees that have grown for many years but have been continually trimmed down to hedge height provide heavy, gnarled trunks for bonsai growers.
Some regions have plant material that is known for its suitability in form. In North America, for example, the California Juniper and Sierra Juniper found in the Sierra Mountains, the Ponderosa pine and Rocky Mountain Juniper found in the Rocky Mountains, and the Bald Cypress found in the swamps of the Everglades. In Western Canada near the Rocky Mountains, wild larch are widely collectible and well-suited to bonsai cultivation.
The benefit of collecting bonsai specimens is that the collected materials can be mature, and will display the natural marks and forms of age, which makes them more suitable for bonsai development than the young plants obtained through nurseries. Some of the difficulties of collecting include getting permission to remove the specimens, and the challenges of keeping a mature tree alive while transplanting it to a bonsai pot.
Techniques
The practice of bonsai development incorporates a number of techniques either unique to bonsai or, if used in other forms of cultivation, applied in unusual ways that are particularly suitable to the bonsai domain.
Leaf trimming
This technique involves the selective removal of leaves (for most varieties of deciduous tree) or needles (for coniferous trees and some others) from a bonsai's trunk and branches. A common aesthetic technique in bonsai design is to expose the tree's branches below groups of leaves or needles (sometimes called "pads"). In many species, particularly coniferous ones, this means that leaves or needles projecting below their branches must be trimmed off. For some coniferous varieties, such as spruce, branches carry needles from the trunk to the tip and many of these needles may be trimmed to expose the branch shape and bark. Needle and bud trimming can also be used in coniferous trees to force back-budding or budding on old wood, which may not occur naturally in many conifers. Along with pruning, leaf trimming is the most common activity used for bonsai development and maintenance, and the one that occurs most frequently during the year.
Pruning
The small size of the tree and some dwarfing of foliage result from pruning the trunk, branches, and roots. Pruning is often the first step in transforming a collected plant specimen into a candidate for bonsai. The top part of the trunk may be removed to make the tree more compact. Major and minor branches that conflict with the designer's plan will be removed completely, and others may be shortened to fit within the planned design. Pruning later in the bonsai's life is generally less severe, and may be done for purposes like increasing branch ramification or encouraging growth in non-pruned branches. Although pruning is an important and common bonsai practice, it must be done with care, as improper pruning can weaken or kill trees. Careful pruning throughout the tree's life is necessary, however, to maintain a bonsai's basic design, which can otherwise disappear behind the uncontrolled natural growth of branches and leaves.
Wiring
Wrapping copper or aluminium wire around branches and trunks allows the bonsai designer to create the desired general form and make detailed branch and leaf placements. When wire is used on new branches or shoots, it holds the branches in place until they lignify (convert into wood), usually 6–9 months or one growing season for deciduous, but several years for pines (which maintain their branch flexibility through multiple growing seasons). Wires are also used to connect a branch to another object (e.g., another branch, the pot itself) so that tightening the wire applies force to the branch. Some species do not lignify strongly, and some specimens' branches are too stiff or brittle to be bent easily. These cases are not conducive to wiring, and shaping them is accomplished primarily through pruning.
Clamping
For larger specimens, or species with stiffer wood, bonsai artists also use mechanical devices for shaping trunks and branches. The most common are screw-based clamps, which can straighten or bend a part of the bonsai using much greater force than wiring can supply. To prevent damage to the tree, the clamps are tightened a little at a time and make their changes over a period of months or years.
Grafting
In this technique, new growing material (typically a bud, branch, or root) is introduced to a prepared area on the trunk or under the bark of the tree. There are two major purposes for grafting in bonsai. First, a number of favorite species do not thrive as bonsai on their natural root stock and their trunks are often grafted onto hardier root stock. Examples include Japanese red maple and Japanese black pine. Second, grafting allows the bonsai artist to add branches (and sometimes roots) where they are needed to improve or complete a bonsai design. There are many applicable grafting techniques, none unique to bonsai, including branch grafting, bud grafting, thread grafting, and others.
Defoliation
Short-term dwarfing of foliage can be accomplished in certain deciduous bonsai by partial or total defoliation of the plant partway through the growing season. Not all species can survive this technique. In defoliating a healthy tree of a suitable species, most or all of the leaves are removed by clipping partway along each leaf's petiole (the thin stem that connects a leaf to its branch). Petioles later dry up and drop off or are manually removed once dry. The tree responds by producing a fresh crop of leaves. The new leaves are generally much smaller than those from the first crop, sometimes as small as half the length and width. If the bonsai is shown at this time, the smaller leaves contribute greatly to the bonsai esthetic of dwarfing. This change in leaf size is usually not permanent, and the leaves of the following spring will often be the normal size. Defoliation weakens the tree and should not be performed in two consecutive years.
Deadwood
Bonsai growers use deadwood bonsai techniques called jin and shari to simulate age and maturity in a bonsai. Jin is the term used when the bark from an entire branch is removed to create the impression of a snag of deadwood. Shari denotes stripping bark from areas of the trunk to simulate natural scarring from a broken limb or lightning strike. In addition to stripping bark, this technique may also involve the use of tools to scar the deadwood or to raise its grain, and the application of chemicals (usually lime sulfur) to bleach and preserve the exposed deadwood.
Care
Watering
With limited space in a bonsai pot, regular attention is needed to ensure the tree is correctly watered. Sun, heat and wind exposure can dry bonsai trees to the point of drought in a short period of time. While some species can handle periods of relative dryness, others require near-constant moisture. Watering too frequently, or allowing the soil to remain soggy, promotes fungal infections and root rot. Free draining soil is used to prevent waterlogging. Deciduous trees are more at risk of dehydration and will wilt as the soil dries out. Evergreen trees, which tend to cope with dry conditions better, do not display signs of the problem until after damage has occurred.
Repotting
Bonsai are repotted and root-pruned at intervals dictated by the vigour and age of each tree. In the case of deciduous trees, this is done as the tree is leaving its dormant period, generally around springtime. Bonsai are often repotted while in development, and less often as they become more mature. This prevents them from becoming pot-bound and encourages the growth of new feeder roots, allowing the tree to absorb moisture more efficiently.
Specimens meant to be developed into bonsai are often placed in "growing boxes", which have a much larger volume of soil per plant than a bonsai pot does. These large boxes allow the roots to grow freely, increasing the vigor of the tree and helping the trunk and branches grow thicker. After using a grow box, the tree may be replanted in a more compact "training box" that helps to create a smaller, denser root mass which can be more easily moved into a final presentation pot.
Tools
Special tools are available for the maintenance of bonsai. The most common tool is the concave cutter (5th from left in picture), a tool designed to prune flush, without leaving a stub. Other tools include branch bending jacks, wire pliers and shears of different proportions for performing detail and rough shaping.
Soil and fertilization
Bonsai soil is usually a loose, fast-draining mix of components, often a base mixture of coarse sand or gravel, fired clay pellets, or expanded shale combined with an organic component such as peat or bark. The inorganic components provide mechanical support for bonsai roots, and—in the case of fired clay materials—also serve to retain moisture. The organic components retain moisture and may release small amounts of nutrients as they decay.
In Japan, bonsai soil mixes based on volcanic clays are common. The volcanic clay has been fired at some point in time to create porous, water-retaining pellets. Varieties such as akadama, or "red ball" soil, and kanuma, a type of yellow pumice used for azaleas and other calcifuges, are used by many bonsai growers. Similar fired clay soil components are extracted or manufactured in other countries around the world, and other soil components like diatomaceous earth can fill a similar purpose in bonsai cultivation.
Opinions about fertilizers and fertilization techniques vary widely among practitioners. Some promote the use of organic fertilizers to augment an essentially inorganic soil mix, while others will use chemical fertilizers freely. Many follow the general rule of little and often, where a dilute fertilizer solution or a small amount of dry fertilizer are applied relatively frequently during the tree's growing season. The flushing effect of regular watering moves unmetabolized fertilizer out of the soil, preventing the potentially toxic build-up of fertilizer ingredients.
Location and overwintering
Bonsai are sometimes marketed or promoted as house plants, but few of the traditional bonsai species can thrive or even survive inside a typical house. The best guideline to identifying a suitable location for a bonsai is its native hardiness. If the bonsai grower can closely replicate the full year's temperatures, relative humidity, and sunlight, the bonsai should do well. In practice, this means that trees from a hardiness zone closely matching the grower's location will generally be the easiest to grow outdoors, and others will require more work or will not be viable at all.
Outdoors
Most bonsai species are outdoor trees and shrubs by nature, and they require temperature, humidity, and sunlight conditions approximating their native climate year round. The skill of the gardener can help plants from outside the local hardiness zone to survive and even thrive, but doing so takes careful watering, shielding of selected bonsai from excessive sunlight or wind, and possibly protection from winter conditions (e.g., through the use of cold boxes or winter greenhouses).
Common bonsai species (particularly those from the Japanese tradition) are temperate climate trees from hardiness zones 7 to 9, and require moderate temperatures, moderate humidity, and full sun in summer with a dormancy period in winter that may need be near freezing. They do not thrive indoors, where the light is generally too dim, and humidity often too low, for them to grow properly. Only in the dormant period can they safely be brought indoors, and even then the plants require cold temperatures, reduced watering, and lighting that approximates the number of hours the sun is visible. Raising the temperature or providing more hours of light than available from natural daylight can cause the bonsai to break dormancy, which often weakens or kills it.
Indoors
Tropical and Mediterranean species typically require consistent temperatures close to room temperature, and with correct lighting and humidity many species can be kept indoors all year. Those from cooler climates may benefit from a winter dormancy period, but temperatures need not be dropped as far as for the temperate climate plants and a north-facing windowsill or open window may provide the right conditions for a few winter months.
Display
A bonsai display presents one or more bonsai specimens in a way that allows a viewer to see all the important features of the bonsai from the most advantageous position. That position emphasizes the bonsai's defined "front", which is designed into all bonsai. It places the bonsai at a height that allows the viewer to imagine the bonsai as a full-sized tree seen from a distance, siting the bonsai neither so low that the viewer appears to be hovering in the sky above it, nor so high that the viewer appears to be looking up at the tree from beneath the ground. Peter Adams recommends that bonsai be shown as if "in an art gallery: at the right height; in isolation; against a plain background, devoid of all redundancies such as labels and vulgar little accessories."
For outdoor displays, there are few aesthetic rules. Many outdoor displays are semi-permanent, with the bonsai trees in place for weeks or months at a time. To avoid damaging the trees, therefore, an outdoor display must not impede the amount of sunlight needed for the trees on display, must support watering, and may also have to block excessive wind or precipitation. As a result of these practical constraints, outdoor displays are often rustic in style, with simple wood or stone components. A common design is the bench, sometimes with sections at different heights to suit different sizes of bonsai, along which bonsai are placed in a line. Where space allows, outdoor bonsai specimens are spaced far enough apart that the viewer can concentrate on one at a time. When the trees are too close to each other, aesthetic discord between adjacent trees of different sizes or styles can confuse the viewer, a problem addressed by exhibition displays.
Indoors, a formal bonsai display is arranged to represent a landscape, and traditionally consists of the featured bonsai tree in an appropriate pot atop a wooden stand, along with a shitakusa (companion plant) representing the foreground, and a hanging scroll representing the background. These three elements are chosen to complement each other and evoke a particular season, and are composed asymmetrically to mimic nature. When displayed inside a traditional Japanese home, a formal bonsai display will often be placed within the home's tokonoma or formal display alcove. An indoor display is usually very temporary, lasting a day or two, as most bonsai are intolerant of indoor conditions and lose vigor rapidly within the house.
Exhibition displays allow a large number of bonsai to be displayed in a temporary exhibition format, typically indoors, as would be seen in a bonsai design competition. To allow many trees to be located close together, exhibition displays often use a sequence of small alcoves, each containing one pot and its bonsai contents. The walls or dividers between the alcoves make it easier to view only one bonsai at a time. The back of the alcove is a neutral color and pattern to avoid distracting the viewer's eye. The bonsai pot is almost always placed on a formal stand, of a size and design selected to complement the bonsai and its pot.
Containers
A variety of informal containers may house the bonsai during its development, and even trees that have been formally planted in a bonsai pot may be returned to growing boxes from time to time. A large growing box will house several bonsai and provide a great volume of soil per tree to encourage root growth. A training box will have a single tree, and a smaller volume of soil that helps condition the tree to the eventual size and shape of the formal bonsai container. There are no aesthetic guidelines for these development containers, and they may be of any material, size, and shape that suit the grower.
Formal bonsai containers are ceramic pots, which come in a variety of shapes and colors and may be glazed or unglazed. Unlike many common plant containers, bonsai pots have drainage holes in the bottom surface to allow excess water to escape the pot. The grower usually covers the holes with a piece of screen or mesh to prevent soil from falling out and hinder pests from entering the pots from below.
For bonsai being shown in their completed state, pot shape, color, and size are chosen to complement the tree as a picture frame is chosen to complement a painting. Containers with straight sides and sharp corners are generally used for formally-shaped plants, while oval or round containers are used for plants with informal designs. Many aesthetic rules guide the selection of pot finish and color. For example, evergreen bonsai are often placed in unglazed pots, while deciduous trees usually appear in glazed pots. Pots are also distinguished by their size. The overall design of the bonsai tree, the thickness of its trunk, and its height are considered when determining the size of a suitable pot.
Some pots are highly collectible, like ancient Chinese or Japanese pots made in regions with experienced pot makers such as Tokoname, Japan or Yixing, China. Today many western potters throughout Europe and North America produce fine quality pots for bonsai.
Common styles
The most common styles include formal upright, informal upright, slanting, semi-cascade, cascade, raft, literati, and group/forest. Less common forms include windswept, weeping, split-trunk, and driftwood styles.
- The formal upright style, or Chokkan, is characterized by a straight, upright, tapering trunk. Branches progress regularly from the thickest and broadest at the bottom to the finest and shortest at the top.
- The trunk and branches of the informal upright style, or Moyogi incorporate visible curves, but the apex of the informal upright is always located directly above the trunk's entry into the soil line. Similar to the formal upright style, branches generally progress regularly from largest at the bottom to smallest at the top, although this progression may be broken where the irregular shape of the trunk would make a branch abnormally prominent or obscure.
- Slant-style, or Shakan, bonsai possess straight trunks like those of bonsai grown in the formal upright style. However, the slant style trunk emerges from the soil at an angle, and the apex of the bonsai will be located to the left or right of the root base.
- Cascade-style, or Kengai, bonsai are modeled after trees which grow over water or on the sides of mountains. The apex, or tip of the tree in the Semi-cascade-style, or Han Kengai, bonsai extend just at or beneath the lip of the bonsai pot; the apex of a (full) cascade style falls below the base of the pot.
- Raft-style, or Netsuranari, bonsai mimic a natural phenomenon that occurs when a tree topples onto its side, for example, from erosion or another natural force. Branches along the top side of the trunk continue to grow as a group of new trunks. Sometimes, roots will develop from buried portions of the trunk. Raft-style bonsai can have sinuous, straight-line, or slanting trunks, all giving the illusion that they are a group of separate trees—while actually being the branches of a tree planted on its side.
- The literati style, or Bunjin-gi, bonsai is characterized by a generally bare trunk line, with branches reduced to a minimum, and typically placed the top of a long, often contorted trunk. This style derives its name from the Chinese literati who created Chinese brush paintings like those found in the ancient text, The Mustard Seed Garden Manual of Painting. Their minimalist landscapes often depicted trees growing in harsh conditions, with contorted trunks and reduced foliage. In Japan, the literati style is known as bunjin-gi (文人木). (Bunjin is a translation of the Chinese phrase wenren meaning "scholars practiced in the arts" and gi is a derivative of the Japanese word, ki, for "tree").
- The group or forest style, or Yose Ue, comprises a planting of several or many trees, and typically an odd number, in a bonsai pot. The trees are usually the same species, with a variety of heights employed to add visual interest and to reflect the age differences encountered in mature forests.
- The broom style, or Hokidachi, is employed for trees with extensive, fine branching, often with species like elms. The trunk is straight and upright. It branches out in all directions about 1/3 of the way up the entire height of the tree. The branches and leaves form a ball-shaped crown which can also be very beautiful during the winter months.
- The multi-trunk style, or Ikadabuki, has all the trunks growing out of one spot with one root system, and it actually is one single tree. Its counterpart in nature is the tree clump formed, for example, where a single pine cone has sprouted a number of seedlings in one spot. All the trunks combine to support one crown of leaves, in which the thickest and most developed trunk forms the top.
- The Shari style, or Sharimiki, style involves portraying a tree in its struggle to live while a significant part of its trunk is bare of bark. In nature, trees in the Sharimiki style are created by lightning or animals eating the bark.
- The root-over-rock style, or Sekijoju, is a style in which the roots of the tree are wrapped around a rock. The rock is at the base of the trunk, with the roots exposed to varying degrees as they traverse the rock and then descend into the soil below.
- The growing-in-a-rock, or Ishizuke, style means the roots of the tree are growing in soil contained within the cracks and holes of the rock. The rock may serve as a simple container, with the tree escaping the container and forming its own shape. Alternatively, the tree may show a definite relationship to the rock's shape, growing close to the rock and following its contours.
Size classifications
Class | Size | ||
---|---|---|---|
tiny | Mame | Keshi-tsubu | up to 2.5 cm (1 in) |
Shito | 2.5–7.5 cm (1–3 in) | ||
small | Shohin | Gafu | 13–20 cm (5–8 in) |
Komono | up to 18 cm (7 in) | ||
Myabi | 15–25 cm (6–10 in) | ||
medium | Kifu | Katade-mochi | up to 40 cm (16 in) |
medium to large | Chu/Chuhin | 40–60 cm (16–24 in) | |
large | Dai/Daiza | Omono | up to 120 cm (47 in) |
Bonju | over 100 cm (39 in) |
Not all sources agree on the exact sizes or names for these ranges, but the concept of the ranges is well-established and necessary to both the cultivation and the aesthetic understanding of the trees. In the very largest size range, a recognized Japanese practice is to name the trees "one-handed", "two-handed", and so on, based on the number of men required to move the tree and pot. These trees will have dozens of branches and can closely simulate a full-sized tree. At the other end of the size spectrum, there are a number of specific techniques and styles associated solely with the smallest sizes, mame and shito. These techniques take advantage of the bonsai's minute dimensions and compensate for the limited number of branches and leaves that can appear on a tree this small.
It has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled Indoor bonsai. (Discuss) |
See also
- Bonsai aesthetics
- Penjing — Chinese precursor to bonsai
- Saikei — tray gardens using bonsai
- Bonkei - Japanese dry tray landscapes
- Niwaki — Japanese art of tree pruning
- Mambonsai — pop culture twist on bonsai
- Indoor bonsai
- Topiary — western art of tree pruning
- List of organic gardening and farming topics
- List of species used in bonsai
- List of bonsai on stamps
- Deadwood Bonsai Techniques
- Tree shaping
- Jerusalem Botanical Gardens
References
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- "bonsai". Phoenixbonsai.com. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- Koreshoff, Deborah R. (1984). Bonsai: Its Art, Science, History and Philosophy. Timber Press, Inc. p. 1. ISBN 0-88192-389-3.
- Yoshimura, Yuji (1991). "Modern Bonsai, Development Of The Art Of Bonsai From An Historical Perspective, Part 2". International Bonsai (4): 37.
- Nippon Bonsai Association (1989). Classic Bonsai of Japan. Kodansha International. p. 140.
- "Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, to 1600". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- ^ Covello, Vincent T. and Yuji Yoshimura (1984). The Japanese Art of Stone Appreciation, Suiseki and Its Use with Bonsai. Charles E. Tuttle. p. 20. Cite error: The named reference "The Japanese Art of Stone Appreciation, Suiseki and Its Use with Bonsai" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 144
- Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 144
- Del Tredici, Peter (1989). "Early American Bonsai: The Larz Anderson Collection of the Arnold Arboretum". Arnoldia (Summer).
- "Japanese Paintings: to 1600". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Redding, Myron. "Art of the Mud Man". Art of Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
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- Naka, John Yoshio (1982). Bonsai Techniques II. Bonsai Institute of California. p. 258.
- "Tree Collection". Elandangardens.com. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
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- Naka, pp. 304-305, 322.
{{cite book}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Katayama, Tei'ichi (1974). The Mini Bonsai Hobby. Japan Publications, Inc. pp. 19–20.
- Bonsai Techniques for Satsuki. Ota Bonsai Nursery. 1979. p. 32.
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ignored (help) - Koreshoff, pg. 8.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - "Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, 1600 to 1800". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Nippon Bonsai Association, pp. 151-152.
{{cite book}}
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Koreshoff, pp. 7-8.
{{cite book}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Naka, John (1989). "Bunjin-Gi or Bunjin Bonsai". Bonsai in California. 23: 48.
- Dalby, Liza et al (ed.) (1984). All-Japan: The Catalogue of Everything Japanese. Quarto Marketing, Inc. p. 44.
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has generic name (help) - "Bonsai Books 1800 to 1840". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
- Nozaki, Shinobu (1940). Dwarf Trees ( Bonsai ). Sanseido Company, Ltd. pp. 25–26.
- O'Connell, Jean (1970). "The Art of Bonsai". Science Digest (March): 38.
- "Bonsai Books 1800 to 1840". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls and Woodblock Prints, 1800 to 1868". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Earliest Known Photograph from Japan which includes a Dwarf Potted Tree by Pierre Rossier, c.1861". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Yamada, Tomio (2005). "Fundamentals of Wiring Bonsai". International Bonsai (4): 10–11.
- Hill, Warren (2000). "Reflections on Japan". NBF Bulletin. XI: 5.
{{cite journal}}
: Text "number 2" ignored (help) - Yamanaka, Kazuki. "The Shimpaku Juniper: Its Secret History, Chapter II. First Shimpaku: Ishizuchi Shimpaku". World Bonsai Friendship Federation. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Nozaki, pg. 24.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Itoh, Yoshimi (1969). "Bonsai Origins". ABS Bonsai Journal. 3 (1): 3.
- Nozaki, pg. 43.
{{cite book}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Koreshoff, pg. 8.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Donovan, Earl H. (1978). "The Spirit of Bunjin". ABS Bonsai Journal. 12 (2): 30.
- Naka, pp. 306, 322.
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Katayama, pg. 20.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - "Expositions Known to Have Had Bonsai Present". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- February 7 "Bonsai Book of Days for February". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
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value (help) - "Dwarf Trees from Current Literature". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 153.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Bonsai and Other Magical Miniature Landscape Specialty Magazines". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Collins, Percy (1907). "The Dwarf-Tree Culture of Japan". Windsor Magazine (October): 540.
- "Count Okuma's Dwarf Trees" from Francis E. Clark in The Independent". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Bonsai Books 1900 to 1849". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Yamada, "Fundamentals of Wiring Bonsai", pg. 10.
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Naka, pg. 322.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Terry, Thomas Philip, F.R.G.S. Terry's Japanese Empire. Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 168. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Pessy, Christian and Rémy Samson (1992). Bonsai Basics, A Step-by-Step Guide to Growing, Training & General Care. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. p. 17.
- Koreshoff, pg. 242.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Yamada, "Fundamentals of Wiring Bonsai", pp. 10-11.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Collins, Percy (1969). "The Dwarf-Tree Culture of Japan". ABS Bonsai Journal (1): 17.
- September 1. "Bonsai Book of Days for September". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
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value (help) - Koreshoff, pg. 10.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Kokufu Bonsai Ten Shows". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Koreshoff, pp. 242-243.
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - "Kyuzo Murata, the Father of Modern Bonsai in Japan". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Nozaki, pp. 6,96.
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Nippon Bonsai Association, pg. 154.
{{cite book}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - "Kyuzo Murata, the Father of Modern Bonsai in Japan". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Some of the Serious Conditions in Japan After World War II". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Hill, pg. 5.
{{cite journal}}
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(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - "Yuji Yoshimura, the Father of Popular Bonsai in the Non-Oriental World". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "The Books on Bonsai and Related Arts". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Kyuzo Murata, the Father of Modern Bonsai in Japan". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Saburō Katō, International Bridge-builder, His Heritage and Legacy". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Yuji Yoshimura, the Father of Popular Bonsai in the Non-Oriental World". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Elias, Thomas S. (2002). "The Best Bonsai and Suiseki Exhibits in Japan". Bonsai Magazine. 41 (May/June): 12.
- April 19 "Bonsai Book of Days for April". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
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value (help) - April 6 "Bonsai Book of Days for April". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
{{cite web}}
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value (help) - "The Conventions, Symposia & Lectures/Demos". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "The Books on Bonsai and Related Arts". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "The Nations -- When Did Bonsai Come to the Various Countries and Territories?". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "Club Newsletter On-Line". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "To Boldly Grow: Some Celluloid Bonsai (An Overview)". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- "About Bonsai Pots and Potters". Phoenix Bonsai. Retrieved 2010-04-07.
- Owen, Gordon (1990). The Bonsai Identifier. Quintet Publishing Ltd. p. 11. ISBN 0-88665-833-0.
- ^ Adams, Peter D. (1981). The Art of Bonsai. Ward Lock Ltd. pp. 71–74. ISBN 0-7063-7116.
{{cite book}}
: Check|isbn=
value: length (help) Cite error: The named reference "the_art_of_bonsai" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - Treasure, Martin (2002). Bonsai Life Histories. Firefly Books Ltd. pp. 12–14. ISBN 1-55209-625-7.
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value: checksum (help) - Lewis, Colin (2003). The Bonsai Handbook. Advanced Marketing Ltd. ISBN 1-903938-30-9.
- ""Grafting as a Bonsai Tool"". Bonsaikc.com. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ""Root Grafts for Bonsai"". Evergreengardenworks.com. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ^ Norman, Ken (2005). Growing Bonsai: A Practical Encyclopedia. Lorenz Books. ISBN 9-780754-815723. Cite error: The named reference "growing_bonsai_a_practical_encyclopedia" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- "It's All In The Soil by Mike Smith, published in ''Norfolk Bonsai'' (Spring 2007) by Norfolk Bonsai Association". Norfolkbonsai.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- Pike, Dave (1989). Indoor Bonsai. The Crowood Press. ISBN 9-781852-232542.
- Lesniewicz, Paul (1996). Bonsai in Your Home. Sterling Publishing Company. ISBN 0-8069-0781-9.
- Andy Rutledge, "Bonsai Display 101", The Art of Bonsai Project. Accessed 18 July 2009.
- ""bunjingi"". Phoenixbonsai.com. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ""Sharimiki Bonsai"". Bonsaiempire.com. Retrieved 2009-11-21.
External links
- National Bonsai & Penjing Museum - U.S. National Arboretum, Washington, DC
- The Art of Bonsai Project - galleries to show bonsai variations
- Magical Miniature Landscapes - comprehensive history of bonsai and related arts
- Bonsai Tree Care - A beginners guide to growing and caring for Bonsai Trees
- - A Comprehensive Guide to Bonsai Gardening.
- Bonsai in the Tropics - Bonsai guides, tutorials, photos, videos, galleries and forums for basic and advanced bonsai.
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