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Mapping sound-space: The Japanese garden as auditory model

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 07:35 authored by Michael Fowler
Japanese culture, through its art, language and religion, is a result of accumulated flows of knowledge from China and Korea. The traditions of garden design and garden construction, similarly, are `a space of flows' from classical Chinese models though, after centuries of development and refinement, have become distinctly reflective of Japanese culture and aesthetics. The first recorded instance of this knowledge flow reaching Japan appears in the eleventh century. The first treatise on Japanese garden design, Sakuteiki (garden making), is attributed to Tachibana no Toshitsuna, a court official and designer of gardens. Though the treatise contains no illustrations, much of the text is precise, and its content reflective of the cultural and aesthetic predilections of the Confucianist Heien court. Other treatises may have been extant during the Heien period (794-1185), though they are now lost.

History

Journal

Architectural Research Quarterly

Volume

14

Issue

1

Start page

63

End page

70

Total pages

8

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Place published

Cambridge, UK

Language

English

Copyright

© Cambridge University Press 2010

Former Identifier

2006019529

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-11-18

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