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A philosophical inquiry into Japanese "rock gardens" and what they might (and might not) meanGardens of Gravel and SandLEONARD KOREN96 pp, 6 x 91/2", paper, 37 duotone photographs
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A simple and provocative book offering a revisionist photo-essay on the ever-popular Japanese "dry landscape" or "rock" gardens. Not Zen, possibly art, more like "meta-gardens," gravel and sand compositions reject nature, yet are made of omnipresent natural dust. Quick to crumble, they are defiantly maintained by priest/ rakers. Credited with philosophical profundity, their origins are murky, their meanings uncertain but immediate. Koren deliberately ignores "celebrity" rocks, moss, and foliage to demystify and explore a most peculiar human enterprise. Beautifully illustrated with duotone photographs of gravel and sand gardens in Kyoto. LEONARD KOREN, who lives in San Francisco and Tokyo, trained as an artist and architect. He is author of Wabi-Sabi, Undesigning the Bath, and How to Take a Japanese Bath. |
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| Other titles of interest
Wabi-Sabi: for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers by Leonard Koren Undesigning the Bath by Leonard Koren How to Take a Japanese Bath by Leonard Koren Japanese Home Stylebook: Architectural Details and Motifs by Saburo Yamagata |