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  2. Tsubo-niwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsubo-niwa

    Totekiko, a famous tsubo-niwa garden, is in the karesansui style and does not use vegetation. A good example of a tsubo-niwa from the Meiji period can be found in the villa of Murin-an in Kyoto. [12] Totekiko is a famous courtyard garden using no vegetation at all. [13]

  3. History of bonsai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_bonsai

    At first, the Japanese used miniaturized trees grown in containers to decorate their homes and gardens. [10] [11] [12] Criticism of the interest in curiously twisted specimens of potted plants shows up in one chapter of the 243-chapter compilation Tsurezuregusa (c. 1331). This work would become a sacred teaching handed down from master to ...

  4. Bonsai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonsai

    Kazan, 8th century. The Japanese art of bonsai is believed to have originated from bonkei (盆景, penjing in Chinese) introduced from China. [6] [7] In the Tang Dynasty, there was the art of representing natural scenery with plants and stones in a tray [citation needed]

  5. Bonsai cultivation and care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonsai_cultivation_and_care

    This prevents them from becoming pot-bound and encourages the growth of new feeder roots, allowing the tree to absorb moisture more efficiently. [5] Specimens meant to be developed into bonsai are often placed in "growing boxes", which have a much larger volume of soil per plant than a bonsai pot does.

  6. Penjing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penjing

    Wu Yee-sun (1905–2005), third generation penjing master and grandson of a Lingnan school founder, held the first exhibition of artistic pot plants jointly with Mr. Liu Fei Yat in Hong Kong in 1968. This was a display of traditional aristocratic penjing which had survived the 1949 Chinese Communist Revolution by leaving/being protected from ...

  7. Chrysanthemum bonsai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysanthemum_bonsai

    Chrysanthemum bonsai forest style at the Nagoya Castle Chrysanthemum Competition 2017. Chrysanthemum bonsai (Japanese: 菊の盆栽, romanized: Kiku no bonsai, lit. 'Chrysanthemum tray planting', pronunciation ⓘ) is a Japanese art form using cultivation techniques to produce, in containers, chrysanthemum flowers that mimic the shape and scale of full size trees, called bonsai.

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