Table of Contents

borrowed scenery - 借景

via: wikipedia & various sources (cf. Borrowed_scenery). see also garginz and http://fo.am/borrowed-scenery

Shakkei (借景 C:jie jing, J:shakkei) was originally codified in the oldest extant Japanese garden manual, the Sakuteiki (作庭記, Sakuteiki “Records of Garden Making”). This text, which is attributed to Tachibana Toshitsuna (橘俊綱, 1028-1094 CE), a son of the Byodoin's designer Fujiwara no Yorimichi (藤原頼通, 990-1074 CE), records the Heian period’s attention to a concept called “mono no aware” (物の哀れ) “the pathos of things”.

Four principle tenets guiding Japanese garden organization

jiejing (借景) "borrow/lend scenery"

The Chinese counterpart of shakkei (借景) is jiejing (借景) “borrow/lend scenery”. According to the 1635 CE Chinese garden manual Yuanye (園冶), there are four categories of “borrowing”,

Best known (still existing) shakkei gardens in Japan

Kyoto

Nara

Kanagawa prefecture

Penjing

Penjing (Chinese: 盆景; pinyin: pén jǐng; literally “tray scenery”> Penjing

Four guiding concepts:


for related thoughts in European context: see the reading notes for Archaeology of Natural Places

project_groworld