This Week in Southern California
1 Jan, 07 > 7 Jan, 07
25 Dec, 06 > 31 Dec, 06
11 Dec, 06 > 17 Dec, 06
20 Nov, 06 > 26 Nov, 06
30 Oct, 06 > 5 Nov, 06
16 Oct, 06 > 22 Oct, 06
9 Oct, 06 > 15 Oct, 06
28 Aug, 06 > 3 Sep, 06
17 Jul, 06 > 23 Jul, 06
10 Jul, 06 > 16 Jul, 06
26 Jun, 06 > 2 Jul, 06
19 Jun, 06 > 25 Jun, 06
12 Jun, 06 > 18 Jun, 06
5 Jun, 06 > 11 Jun, 06
29 May, 06 > 4 Jun, 06
22 May, 06 > 28 May, 06
15 May, 06 > 21 May, 06
1 May, 06 > 7 May, 06
24 Apr, 06 > 30 Apr, 06
17 Apr, 06 > 23 Apr, 06
10 Apr, 06 > 16 Apr, 06
27 Mar, 06 > 2 Apr, 06
13 Mar, 06 > 19 Mar, 06
27 Feb, 06 > 5 Mar, 06
20 Feb, 06 > 26 Feb, 06
13 Feb, 06 > 19 Feb, 06
6 Feb, 06 > 12 Feb, 06
16 Jan, 06 > 22 Jan, 06
9 Jan, 06 > 15 Jan, 06
2 Jan, 06 > 8 Jan, 06
19 Dec, 05 > 25 Dec, 05
12 Dec, 05 > 18 Dec, 05
28 Nov, 05 > 4 Dec, 05
21 Nov, 05 > 27 Nov, 05
14 Nov, 05 > 20 Nov, 05
7 Nov, 05 > 13 Nov, 05
17 Oct, 05 > 23 Oct, 05
3 Oct, 05 > 9 Oct, 05
19 Sep, 05 > 25 Sep, 05
12 Sep, 05 > 18 Sep, 05
5 Sep, 05 > 11 Sep, 05
29 Aug, 05 > 4 Sep, 05
31 Dec, 01 > 6 Jan, 02
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Art
Bonsai
Book
Buddhist
Buyo
Ceramic
Craft
Event
Exchange
Festival
Film
Folk Art
Folk Ensemble
Gagaku
Garden
Geisha
Ikebana
Kimono
Koto
Lecture
Little Tokyo
Manga
Music
Nagauta
New Year's Day
Okinawa
Photo
Shakuhachi
Sister City
Social Issues
Stone
Sumo
Sushi
Taiko
Tea Ceremony
Tsugaru Shamisen
US-Japan
University Programs
Yamatogaku
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
Cultural News' Recommendation
Sushi Chef Institute
Den's Tea, Inc.
12/12/06
Annual viewing stone show at Huntington Library, Dec. 27 - Jan. 2
Topic: Stone

 

Stone appreciation: An ancient Asian art form of meditation (Courtesy of California Aiseki Kai)

 

By Larry Ragle

 

     “A room full of rocks might seem an unlikely place to find artistic inspiration or inner enlightenment.   If those rocks are viewing stones, however, the viewer will find all that and a great deal more.” Lisa Blackburn, Huntington Botanical Gardens and Library 

 

     Viewing stones are dense stones found in rivers, along the ocean shore or desert. While there are tens of thousands stones within ones visual scope at any moment, perhaps one stone has been eroded by natural circumstances, water or wind and sand, resulting in the shape of a miniature scene.

 

    These shapes may be suggestive of a landscape (suiseki) such as mountains, islands, waterfalls, coastal rocks or shelters or object (keisho seki) such as humans, animals, huts, boats or patterns (monyo seki) such as sun, moon, stars, rain, lightning, grass, bamboo and garden stones (newa ishi)

 

    The collector may find that hidden masterpiece based, in part, on ones life experiences, familiarity of the shapes and styles of viewing stones, persistence and their mood at the moment.

 

    Experienced collectors believe that finding one such masterpiece during a year of searching is an achievement, since an ideal stone is a rarity. None-the-less, several masterpiece stones have been found by novice collectors on their first hunt. Two such stones are in the National Collection in Washington, DC.

 

     The Chinese, in their travels to Korea and Japan, are credited with introducing the art of stone appreciation while the Japanese modified and refined the art into its present standards. Penjing, an all inclusive term, applies to Chinese viewing stones and miniature trees, while suiseki (sui-water, seki-stone) describes the traditional Japanese art form of landscape stones. Although penjing and suiseki have a common origin, they have evolved into quite different forms and styles. The Korean term for viewing stones is soosuk (water stone).

 

     California Aiseki Kai, focusing on the Japanese tradition, will present its 17th Annual Viewing Stone Show of 150 or more outstanding examples, representing years of collecting by club members, for the most part in California, at The Huntington Botanical Gardens and Library in San Marino, Dec. 27 through Jan. 2, closed Jan 1, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. each day, in Friends’ Hall. Informative slide shows and docent tours. Go to www.aisekikai.com for further details.

 

    Larry Ragle is the founder of California Aiseki Kai.

 


Posted by culturalnews at 16:03 PST
Updated: 12/12/06 16:12 PST
Post Comment | Permalink

View Latest Entries