Notes: Adam and Eve

The Japanese Garden can be thought of as Adam and Eve after they had eaten the fruit. Nature is as Adam and Eve who had not eaten.
Nature = Naked
Gardens = Clothed
Japanese gardens, unlike a completely nude beauty, is a beauty who has suitably clothed her body.

I am not sure where I read this. It is an interesting comparison to consider. 

Notes: Link Between Gardens and Poetry

I think these notes comes from "Magic of Trees and Stones" by Katsuo Saito.

...a means of self-expression using a variety of images drawn from nature. Rather than recreating nature as found in the real world, were distilled images and arranging these poetic fragments into an amalgam in the garden. 
Heian Gardens: not perceived as total compositions but rather as a collection of poetic images. But images were not always first-hand, but images from poetry.
The use of existing, commonly understood poetic images as a basis for garden design.
Much of Japanese poetry was given over to nature description.
"Pine Tree" and "Wait" both equals "Matsu". So the pine tree becomes a suggestion of waiting, in particular - yearning for a lover or the resolution of an impossible situation.
'Birds and Flowers of Spring and Summer', one of a pair of six-fold screens by Kano Eino (Edo Period) | Suntory Museum of Art.

'Birds and Flowers of Spring and Summer', one of a pair of six-fold screens by Kano Eino (Edo Period) | Suntory Museum of Art.

Notes from Note Taking

I am up early each morning now preparing for my landscape and garden design workshops. This means I am reading through all my design notes from the past several years. So often when we fill our blank books with information and insights, we rarely have reason and chance to re-visit them. And so they sit for years on a shelf or in a box. All that knowledge. All those thoughts.

It is proving to be a source of deep happiness to re-read all my notes and so often I think of someone with whom I want to share these little snippets with. But can people endure early morning texts each day? So I shall deposit them here. They will be random and many without context. Much like my notebooks themselves.

  • familiarity with a newness
  • areas of retreat, areas of social gathering
  • never put a camber with gravel - have a one-way fall
  • cambers are good for asphalt
  • asphalt isn't great for areas with a high water table
  • edging always comes first to establish levels
  • best time to find out about he water table is winter time - dig a meter deep (even in Utah?)
  • we are designers and specifiers
  • loose gravel weighs about 70% of the weight of the same solid rock
  • sedimentary rocks changes soil PH
  • granite does not change soil PH
  • put it down 65mm thick so it finishes 50mm thick
  • we are all bound in an endless cycle of suffering, caused by want and desire

Pure Land (Jodo): A Heaven where the spirits of enlightened individuals enter at death to be removed from the endless cycle of death and rebirth. It's an island - connected to shore by a bridge, Pure Land is attainable.

Aware (Ah-wa-ray): An epiphany at the discovery of beauty in the pathos of life.

Artist Statement

Below is an old Artist Statement I wrote about my work with the Great Salt Lake.

The mystical and ever-changing landscape of the Great Salt Lake in Utah's Great Basin is a highly curious subject for exploration. The story of space and time is told in surreal ways as wind and water carve and sculpt the salted sand into sinuous curves. Light and shadow weave into the water and rake across the sand, emphasizing the patterns and forms.

It's an elemental and otherworldly landscape, paired back to the minimal: sand, salt, water, and sky, with some mountains hosted along the distant horizon. Plant and animal life is limited. Yet in this seemingly basic environment, complexity and intricacy are tireless if one only looks. As an artist integrating myself into this space, I find surprising worlds through the lens of the camera. 

Here's to the ones who dream. Foolish as they may seem. Here's to the hearts that ache. Here's to the mess we make.

 - La La Land

Shop Update: Interpretive Landscape Drawings

Last year I took several road trips and wanders around the West. During these excursions I created interpretive landscape drawings or sketches, minimal marks to capture the landscape. I have now added several of my favorites to my online shop and they are available for purchase. 

2017 will see more wanders and more sketches. I am excited for where the open road will take me and to the plants, rocks, and forms I will appreciate and interpret along the way.

All sketches come initialed.

A quote for the New Year

We favor the simple expression of the complex thought.
— Mark Rothko and Adolph Gottlieb

I haven't made any New Year's resolutions yet. I have mixed feeling about them. But I do like this quote and I think it is worth some pondering over as a new year does begin. 


And since it is a new year that means my Rothko 2016 calendar I bought from the Tate Modern in London last December is no longer of daily use. How sad. For the past two years my calendars have come from the Tate Modern. However, I didn't get over there in time for the 2017 version. A pity. 

Quote on Time

Time is what keeps everything from happening at once. 

- attributed to different sources, including Einstein...skeptically.

Quote

The garden that is finished is dead. - H. E. Bates