Early Japanese rock gardens Stone gardens existed in Japan at least since the
Heian period (794–1185). These early gardens were described in the first manual of Japanese gardens,
Sakuteiki ("Records of Garden Keeping"), written at the end of the 11th century by Tachibana no Toshitsuna (1028–1094). They adapted the Chinese garden philosophy of the
Song dynasty (960–1279), where groups of rocks symbolized
Mount Penglai, the legendary mountain-island home of the
Eight Immortals in
Chinese mythology, known in Japanese as
Horai. The
Sakuteiki described exactly how rocks should be placed. In one passage, he wrote: "In a place where there is neither a lake or a stream, one can put in place what is called a
kare-sansui, or dry landscape". This kind of garden featured either rocks placed upright like mountains, or laid out in a miniature landscape of hills and ravines, with few plants. He described several other styles of rock garden, which usually included a stream or pond, including the great river style, the mountain river style, and the marsh style. The ocean style featured rocks that appeared to have been eroded by waves, surrounded by a bank of white sand, like a beach. White sand and gravel had long been a feature of Japanese gardens. In the
Shinto religion, it was used to symbolize purity, and was used around shrines, temples, and palaces. In Zen gardens, it represents water, or, like the white space in Japanese paintings, emptiness and distance. They are places of meditation.
Zen Buddhism and the Muromachi period (1336–1573) The Muromachi period in Japan, which took place at roughly the same time as the
Renaissance in Europe, was characterized by political rivalries which frequently led to wars, but also by an extraordinary flourishing of Japanese culture. It saw the beginning of
Noh theater, the
Japanese tea ceremony, the
shoin style of Japanese architecture, and the Zen garden.
Zen Buddhism was introduced into Japan at the end of the 12th century, and quickly achieved a wide following, particularly among the
Samurai class and war lords, who admired its doctrine of self-discipline. The gardens of the early Zen temples in Japan resembled Chinese gardens of the time, with lakes and islands. But in Kyoto in the 14th and 15th century, a new kind of garden appeared at the important Zen temples. These Zen gardens were designed to stimulate meditation. "Nature, if you made it expressive by reducing it to its abstract forms, could transmit the most profound thoughts by its simple presence", Michel Baridon wrote. "The compositions of stone, already common in China, became in Japan, veritable petrified landscapes, which seemed suspended in time, as in certain moments of Noh theater, which dates to the same period." The first garden to begin the transition to the new style is considered by many experts to be
Saihō-ji, "The Temple of the Perfumes of the West", popularly known as
Koke-dera, the Moss Temple, in the western part of Kyoto. The Buddhist monk and Zen master
Musō Kokushi transformed a Buddhist temple into a Zen monastery in 1334, and built the gardens. The lower garden of Saihō-ji is in the traditional Heian period style; a pond with several rock compositions representing islands. The upper garden is a dry rock garden which features three rock "islands". The first, called
Kameshima, the island of the turtle, resembles a turtle swimming in a "lake" of moss. The second,
Zazen-seki, is a flat "meditation rock," which is believed to radiate calm and silence; and the third is the
kare-taki, a dry "waterfall" composed of a stairway of flat granite rocks. The moss which now surrounds the rocks and represents water, was not part of the original garden plan; it grew several centuries later when the garden was left untended, but now is the most famous feature of the garden. Muso Kokushi built another temple garden at
Tenryū-ji, the "Temple of the Celestial Dragon". This garden appears to have been strongly influenced by Chinese landscape painting of the
Song dynasty, which feature mountains rising in the mist, and a suggestion of great depth and height. The garden at Tenryū-ji has a real pond with water and a dry waterfall of rocks looking like a Chinese landscape. Saihō-ji and Tenryū-ji show the transition from the Heian style garden toward a more abstract and stylized view of nature. The most famous of all Zen gardens in Kyoto is
Ryōan-ji, built in the late 15th century where for the first time the Zen garden became purely abstract. The garden is a rectangle of 340 square meters. Placed within it are fifteen stones of different sizes, carefully composed in five groups; one group of five stones, two groups of three, and two groups of two stones. The stones are surrounded by white gravel, which is carefully raked each day by the monks. The only vegetation in the garden is some moss around the stones. The garden is meant to be viewed from a seated position on the veranda of the
hōjō, the residence of the abbot of the monastery. The garden at
Daisen-in (1509–1513) took a more literary approach than Ryōan-ji. There a "river" of white gravel represents a metaphorical journey through life; beginning with a dry waterfall in the mountains, passing through rapids and rocks, and ending in a tranquil sea of white gravel, with two gravel mountains. The invention of the Zen garden was closely connected with developments in Japanese ink landscape paintings. Japanese painters such as
Sesshū Tōyō (1420–1506) and
Soami (died 1525) greatly simplified their views of nature, showing only the most essential aspects of nature, leaving great areas of white around the black and gray drawings. Soami is said to have been personally involved in the design of two of the most famous Zen gardens in Kyoto, Ryōan-ji and Daisen-in, though his involvement has never been documented with certainty. Michel Baridon wrote, "The famous Zen gardens of the
Muromachi period showed that Japan had carried the art of gardens to the highest degree of intellectual refinement that it was possible to attain." File:Saihouji-kokedera01.jpg|
Saihō-ji The Moss Garden, an early Zen garden from the mid-14th century. The moss arrived much later, when the garden was not tended. File:Ginkakuji-M1953.jpg|The garden of Ginkaku-ji features a replica of Mount Fuji made of gravel, in a gravel sea. it was the model for similar miniature mountains in Japanese gardens for centuries. File:250201 Ryoan-ji Kyoto Japan06s3.jpg|Part of the garden at
Ryōan-ji (late 15th century), the most abstract of all Japanese Zen gardens File:Ryoanji rock garden close up.jpg|Classic triad rock composition at Ryōan-ji. File:Daisen-in3.jpg|The white gravel "ocean" of the garden of Daisen-ji, to which the gravel river flows. File:Daitokuji-Zuihoin-Zuihotei-M1827.jpg|The Garden of the Blissful Mountain at Zuiho-in, a sub-temple of Daitoku-ji. File:Daitokuji-Zuihoin-M1836.jpg|In Zuiho-in garden – some of the rocks are said to form a cross. The garden was built by the daimyō
Ōtomo Sōrin, who was a convert to Christianity. File:Korakuen Okayama26s3872.jpg File:Zuihou-in2.JPG File:Toufuku-ji hojyo5.JPG File:Harima-ankokuji-sekitei01.jpg
Later rock gardens During the
Edo period, the large promenade garden became the dominant style of Japanese garden, but Zen gardens continued to exist at Zen temples. A few small new rock gardens were built, usually as part of a garden where a real stream or pond was not practical. In 1880, the buildings of
Tōfuku-ji temple in Kyoto, one of the oldest temples in the city, were destroyed by a fire. In 1940, the temple commissioned the landscape historian and architect Shigemori Mirei to recreate the gardens. He created four different gardens, one for each face of the main temple building. He made one garden with five artificial hills covered with grass, symbolizing the five great ancient temples of Kyoto; a modern rock garden, with vertical rocks, symbolizing Mount
Horai; a large "sea" of white gravel raked in a checkboard pattern; and an intimate garden with swirling sand patterns. In the last century, Zen gardens have appeared in many countries outside Japan. File:TofukujiGarden1.jpg|The garden of Tōfuku-ji (1940). The five hills symbolize the five great Zen temples of Kyoto. File:Toufuku-ji hojyo3.JPG|The modern Zen garden at Tōfuku-ji (1940). File:Toufuku-ji kaizandou3.JPG|A Zen garden in a checkboard pattern, at Tōfuku-ji (1940). File:TofukujiReiunin1.jpg|A courtyard Zen garden at Tōfuku-ji (1940). File:Toufuku-ji hojyo4.JPG|Part of the modern Zen garden at Tōfuku-ji (1940). The "islands" of the immortals. File:ReiunIn GaunNoNiwa.jpg|Part of the modern Zen garden at Tōfuku-ji (1940). File:Shitennoj honbo garden06s3200.jpg|
Shitennō-ji Honbō garden File:Japanese Tea Garden (San Francisco, California).jpg|A small garden in the
Japanese Tea Garden of Golden Gate Park, in San Francisco File:Portland Japanese gardens zen garden.jpg|Sand and stone garden located in the
Portland Japanese Gardens. File:Anyoin02 1024.jpg|
An'yō-in Garden of
Taisan-ji in
Kobe,
Hyogo,
Japan. File:240224 Rozan-ji Kyoto Japan04s3.jpg|Rosan-ji garden File:Adachi Museum of Art04st3200.jpg|Adachi Museum of Art File:MyoshinjiTaizoin2.jpg|
Taizō-in,
Myōshin-ji, in Kyoto File:Komyozenji Stone garden 1.JPG|KōmyōZen-ji File:Jissoin-Temple-Stone-Garden.JPG|Jissō-in, in Kyoto (Iwakura) File:Japanese Garden at Hamilton Gardens, Waikato, New Zealand..jpg|Japanese Garden at Hamilton Gardens, Waikato, New Zealand File:Japanese Rock Garden Chandigarh 1.jpg|Japanese Rock Garden (Phase 1), Chandigarh (India) File:Japanese Rock Garden Chandigarh 2.jpg|Japanese Rock Garden (Phase 2), Chandigarh (India) File:Sculpture of Zen masterTaisen Deshimaru in the temple Kosan Ryumonji.jpg|Sculpture of
Zen master
Taisen Deshimaru in the Zen garden of the temple Kosan Ryumonji. Kosan Ryumon-Ji in
Weiterswiller in
France ==Selection and arrangement of rocks==