Showing posts with label karesansui. Show all posts
Showing posts with label karesansui. Show all posts

Friday, November 21, 2025

Jyoei-ji Temple & the Shigemori Garden

 


Jyoei-ji Temple in Yamaguchi City is a Rinzai temple more commonly known as Sesshuteien after the garden designed by Sesshu within its grounds.


A statue of Sesshu, one of the most important artists and garden designers in Japanese history as well as being a zen monk, stands at the entrance to the temple.


On the approach you pass through Muin, a wide, fairly simple garden created in 2012. photos above and below. This is the first of 4 gardens at the temple.


None of the current buildings are very old, but it is quite a big temple with many smaller halls within the grounds.



The temple also has some nice art...


However, the main focus of the temple is the huge garden to the rear which is the biggest garden designed by Sesshu and said to be based on one of his landscape paintings....


I was here at the start of day 23 of my walk along the Chugoku Pilgrimage and it was peak Autumn Colours time so I highly recommend my post from last year of 24 shots of the Sesshu Garden in glorious colours.


For this post I will concetrate on the garden in front of the main hall.


It was designed by Mirei Shigemori.


It is called Nanmeitei garden and was built in 1968.


There is a story that the head priest asked Shigemori to make a garden that was not so good so that it did not detract from the Sesshu Garden.


The garden uses the two gates as a backdrop.


Please enjoy these close-up shots of the garden.










The honzon of the temple is a Thousand-armed Kannon.


The final garden is a small karesansui garden using  a reddish gravel rather than the usual white....


I once again urge you to check out the post of the Sesshu Garden in full Autumn Colours.


The previous post in this series was on my walk into Yamaguchi City the previous afternoon.


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Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Senshukaku Karesansui Garden

 


Senshukaku is one of the names of the former Omote Goten of Tokushima Castle.


It's not a particularly big garden, but it splits nicely into two halves: a karesansui garden and a pond garden.


This first post is just on the karesansui part. I will cover the pond garden next.


Stones and rocks are the neart of a Japanese garden. This is my opinion after viewing hindreds of gardens. The rocks are chosen and set first and the rest of the garden grows from that.


This is certainly obvious here in the gardens at the former Tokushima Castle.


One particular type of stone predominates, known as Awa Bluestone. Not a geologist but I believe it is a type of rock called greenschist in English.


Awa bluestone was used a lot by the greatest 20th-century Japanese gardener, Mirei Shigemori.


The garden was designed by Ueda Soko ( 1563-1650) a warlord as well as a garden designer, and was built around 1600.


He was also a tea master and founded his own school of tea ceremony.


Some of his other gardens include the Nishinomaru garden at Wakayama Castle, and one I posted about quite recently, the Shukkeien Garden in Hiroshima.


Perhaps the most famous site in the garden is the stone bridge made of a single ten meter long piece of bluestone.


Seen in photos 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 15, and 20.


The long piece of rock is actually split, according to legend, by Hachisuka Yoshishige, the first lord of the castle, and the person for whom the garden was built.


It is said he stamped upon it and it cracked.


The gardens are a designated National Scenic Spot.









The previous garden I posted on was the garden at Matsue History Museum.


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