Fülszöveg
The Japanese garden designer, lm<e im'po^,
creates a theater for the wind to speak, and
to our delight we find that the wind has
words. în listening, we^participate in more
than just a pleasant ^aî?den'"scen€î^.w€
participate in our own immortality. wlth
Japanese Garden Design, Marc Peter Keane
provides an etymôlog%. grammar, and
lexicon for otqph^^^^ what the wind
has to say,
In a land where space is infinitely precious, the art of landscaping and garden design has been taken to its ultimate limits of expression. Yet while instantly recognizable
by their unique and exquisite form, these
gardens invariably resist a straightforward
intellectual comprehension. thi^ viewer
instinctively senses that their creation has
involved ah aesthetic and philosophy that are
completely separate from the western tradition. \h Japanese Garden Design, y\arc Peter Keane presents to thé reader the
essential concepts and processes that
Japanese garden designers have ei\^ployed...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
The Japanese garden designer, lm<e im'po^,
creates a theater for the wind to speak, and
to our delight we find that the wind has
words. în listening, we^participate in more
than just a pleasant ^aî?den'"scen€î^.w€
participate in our own immortality. wlth
Japanese Garden Design, Marc Peter Keane
provides an etymôlog%. grammar, and
lexicon for otqph^^^^ what the wind
has to say,
In a land where space is infinitely precious, the art of landscaping and garden design has been taken to its ultimate limits of expression. Yet while instantly recognizable
by their unique and exquisite form, these
gardens invariably resist a straightforward
intellectual comprehension. thi^ viewer
instinctively senses that their creation has
involved ah aesthetic and philosophy that are
completely separate from the western tradition. \h Japanese Garden Design, y\arc Peter Keane presents to thé reader the
essential concepts and processes that
Japanese garden designers have ei\^ployed
through the centuries, knowledge necessary
for a true appreciation and cultivated
familiarity with these uving works of sculp-
ture, these sacred spaces for reflection, these ethereal and graceful gardens of
Japan.
Vissza