This is my garden and pond SESERAGI. It is the end of August and my garden is starting to turn. Now it is at the moment of the achievement of perfection before September, and the beginning of decline and decay.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
MY SABI GARDEN
Sunday, August 15, 2010
SAKURAN
I really enjoyed this Japanese movie "Sakuran". It is a story that takes place in the Yoshiwara (geisha) district of Tokyo. It is glorious eye candy. Although the reviews in Japan were mostly negative, I loved the overall use of red, gorgeous kimono, beautiful flower arrangements, great sound track, and scene after scene that looked like Japanese prints. The original story comes from a manga (Japanese comic book). If you can find a copy with English subtitles, watch it it's worth while. Hopefully it will be on Netflix soon.
http://www.amazon.com/Heisei-Fuzoku-Sheena-Ringo/dp/B000O76UNK/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1281916603&sr=1-2-fkmr0
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
COW DUNG
Saturday, April 3, 2010
CHARPOY
A Charpoy is a bed or cot used in India. It has a wooden frame with woven webbing for the top. Some charpoys have very decorative webbing others are quite simple.
I took these pictures when I lived in India for 9 months researching Indian textiles. The pictures were taken in Shrikalahasti, Andra Pradesh.
CHARPOY from * on Vimeo.
I took these pictures when I lived in India for 9 months researching Indian textiles. The pictures were taken in Shrikalahasti, Andra Pradesh.
CHARPOY from * on Vimeo.
Labels:
Charpoy,
indian bed,
indian cot
Location:
Asia
Monday, March 1, 2010
SACRED TREES

THANGKAS OF THE WISHING TREE
Trees have natural divinity. The abode of gods and spirits, the living cosmic tree reaches into both upper and lower spheres of the ritual universe, defining their position with respect to everyday experience and serving to symbolize the path that the soul-mind-awareness must take during ritual. The sacred tree appears in many forms of religious belief, from the cross of Christianity to the central pole of the plains Indian Sundance lodge. The single cottonwood pole which stands at the heart of the Sundance Lodge represents the link between the earth and sky realms and the four winds or directions.

In Japan, trees are objects of reverence and especially so if they are of great age or size, or otherwise remarkable for their shape. Such trees are known as Shimboku, divine trees and distinguished by a hemp rope being wound around their trunk.
As a rule the surface was left unworked and any natural irregularities were made visible. Artistic treatment of the surface was hardly ever permitted. In the scrolls and screens the pine is one of the trees most commonly depicted. It is considered the symbol of longevity constancy and self discipline. since it is able to withstand the cold and does not shed its needles. It's gnarled growth formed by wind, rain, sun and snow, was of perpetual fascination to the artists of China and Japan.
In India there are many sacred trees and spirits are thought to reside in them.
Trees from Nuapatna, Orissa, India
Tree with snake stones Nuapatna, India
Tree with offerings of necklaces and a ceramic pot for milk.
Stone carving from a temple in Bhubaneswar,
Orissa, India
Palampore images are of the Tree of Life. A palampore is a type of hand-painted and mordant-dyed bed cover that was made in India for the export market during the eighteenth century and very early nineteenth century.
Palampore patterns were usually very complex and elaborate, depicting a wide variety of plants, flowers, and animals, including peacocks, elephants, and horses. Because a palampore was hand-created, each design is unique.
Concrete tree, Puri, Orissa, India
Lattice carving, Forbidden City, Beijing, China
M. Joan Lintault Uncoiling Snakes, Hand dyed, screen painted cotton, appliqué, hand painted, quilted, sewing machine lace, beads. 81.5 x 81.5 in, 207 x 207 cm.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
THE MUSIC IN MY HEAD, BEHIND MY EYES
Thank you Tereya Cafe for the link.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tereya-Cafe/120212699420
http://tere-ya.at.webry.info/
Monday, January 18, 2010
DAWN TILL DUSK
Fog and morning dew
Fill the cool and silent woods
At the crack of dawn.
Dorothy (Alves) Holmes
On this New Year's day
Each thought a loneliness
As winter dusk descends.
Basho
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