Kendall H. Brown

Visionary Landscapes


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      Hoeschler Residence, St. Paul, MN.

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      B Residence, Darien, CT.

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      B Residence, Darien, CT.

      Visionary

       Landscapes

      Japanese Garden Design in North America

       The Work of Five Contemporary Masters

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      KENDALL H. BROWN

       PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVID COBB

      TUTTLE Publishing

       Tokyo | Rutland, Vermont | Singapore

      contents

       Traditions of Change: Japanese-Style Gardens Today

       CHAPTER 1

       Hōichi Kurisu

       Gardens of Vision—Lives of Insight: The Healing Worlds of Hōichi Kurisu

       A Life in Gardens

       Repairing the World: The Samaritan Lebanon Community Hospital Garden

       Eden on the Fourteenth Floor: A Garden Grows in Downtown Chicago

       The Journey Begins: The DeVos Japanese Garden at the Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park

       CHAPTER 2

       Takeo Uesugi

       Joy and Light: The Spiritual Gardens of Takeo Uesugi

       The Accidental Garden Builder

       Confluence in Three Dimensions: The Grand Hyatt Atlanta

       Light and Space by the Pacific: The Uyesugi Residence in Malibu

       Following the Path: The San Diego Friendship Garden

       CHAPTER 3

       David Slawson

       The Nature of Gardens: David Slawson’s Sense of Place

       Finding Self, Evoking Landscape

       Sage Mountain Sky: The Garden at the Aspen Institute

       Landscapes for Evolved Living: Minnesota’s North Shore at the Hoeschler Residence

       Integrating Life and Landscape: An Ozark Glen at the Heinzelmann Residence

       Mountain High: The Floating Cloud Bridge at Garvan Woodland Gardens

       CHAPTER 4

       Shin Abe

       Modernist Space: Shin Abe’s Dynamically Balanced Gardens

       Creating Balance, Building a Practice

       Reverberations: The United Nations’ Peace Bell Courtyard

       An Intimate Journey: The Garden Path at a Private Washington, DC Residence

       Inspiration for Reflection: Restorative Gardens at the Stoner Residence

       On the Edge: Sculpting Water at the EF Building II, Cambridge, MA

       CHAPTER 5

       Marc Peter Keane

       Garden Artistry: Marc Peter Keane’s Reflections on Nature and Gardens

       The “Lives” of the Eminent Garden Artist

       Gardens as Journeys: The B Residence, Darien, CT

       Forest-Ocean Garden: The Blum Residence, Irvington, NY

       Dream Islands: The Z Residence, Stone Ridge, NY

       At Tiger Glen Garden: Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University

       Endnotes

       Acknowledgments

       Select Bibliography

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      Private residence, Washington, DC.

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      DeVos Japanese Garden, Grand Rapids, MI.

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      Morikami Japanese Gardens, Delray Beach, FL.

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      Tiger Glen Garden, Ithaca, NY.

      TRADITIONS OF CHANGE:

       JAPANESE-STYLE GARDENS TODAY

      Gardens have flourished in Japan for fifteen centuries. Japanese gardens have been created around the world for only about 150 years, yet they are now more common outside Japan than in it. For non-Japanese, these gardens often exist as dreams of elsewhere and constructions of otherness. As microcosms of an idealized Japanese tradition, the landscapes can provide a compelling alternative to the banality of the here and now. Japanese gardens also serve as a kind of road home, a way of connecting with idealizations of nature that restore us mentally and physically. They are a cultural interpretation of nature refined into compelling and inspiring design forms transportable across time and space.

      In the 21st century, Japanese gardens may well be considered a universal art. Like classical music, they are a set of forms and principles nurtured over time in a distinct place, then embraced and adapted so widely and deeply as to constitute an expressive language likely meaningful everywhere and available to anyone. Links with their birth culture, once strong, have become weaker as these garden styles accumulate identities and functions that may relate to Japan only tangentially. As such, it makes sense to call them Japanese-style gardens, acknowledging gardens based on adaptable values rather than gardens made in Japan or about Japan.

      How and why have Japanese-style gardens grown into this remarkable, universal phenomenon? Beginning at world fairs in the 1870s in Europe and North America, Japanese entrepreneurs and officials built gardens as captivating settings for Japanese cultural and trade displays. At the same time, Euro-American tourists to Japan were filling their itineraries to the “flowery kingdom” with visits to gardens at temples, villas, restaurants and curio shops. Soon gardens became a kind of export commodity. Returning home, well-healed globetrotters commissioned their own Japanese garden. Aided by Japanese immigrants eager for work and abetted by Josiah Conder’s popular primer, Landscape Gardening in Japan (1893), gardens graced grand country homes and middle-class yards. Entrepreneurs fashioned commercial tea gardens where people gathered for leisure. City fathers, anxious to promote civic culture and beauty, adorned their parks with Japanese gardens.

      In the Cold War era after World War II, the desire to re-establish bonds with Japan instigated a fresh era of Western interest in Japanese culture. This led to the refashioning of Japanese gardens as symbols of sophisticated beauty and international cooperation. Whether naturalistic gardens that abjured the trappings of pre-war exoticism, or “dry landscape” stone gardens that spoke the new universal