Deep Sea Diver
Imperial Masterpiece
Just some thoughts @cishepard. I admire your efforts to explore ways to achieve a different aesthetic. I highly encourage you to keep working on it.
One comment I read above that did strike home from a basic principle of artistic design. That is the principle of unity throughout the design. If one looks at Laurent’s work one will see the trunks are as wildly curved as the branches... creating unity in his designs. No matter what one does to design a tree, they should at least adhere to the principles and elements of design to maximize the aesthetic value of a design.
btw Laurent actually says he changed the name of Burton bonsai technique to Cosmic Bonsai due to not wanting to get sued by Tim Burton.
If Laurent actually copied the Octopus aesthetic he took the design to a higher level and at least gave it a goal and kept the trees healthy while doing so.
There are plenty of valid points here and a good discussion of breaking away from and distaste for the cookie cutter Japanese model. Yet once at an exhibition (from my perspective) trees are generally judged mostly on adhering to key principles and elements of Japanese bonsai design. (Also awards are mostly given to those who have professionals style and coif their trees, but that’s beside the point).
Folks may differ in their aesthetic taste, yet no matter how far they seem to stray, folks always seems to devolve to utilizing a core of these elements. Maybe that’s the extent our art can be taken.…. Dig up a tree, do something wild to it, then bring it back into the Japanese wheelhouse.…is this different, or just a variation on a theme. If that’s the extent of bonsai as an art, it’s a crying shame.
Dave De Groot said something along these lines, “If an artist does something unconventional and folks like this, the artist makings variations on this theme. At this point each becomes a crafting project.” Sound familiar? r ar
As much as folks want to change, the majority keep pushing away folks that somehow don’t meet these criteria. In an echo from the past it’s no wonder Dan Robinson was not invited back to the big SoCal exhibitions after demoing his chainsaw technique to the dismissive crowd there years ago. Only to laud Kimura for doing the very same thing 20 years later, but with a Japanese vs naturalistic finish.
One step forward and another back. Status quo preserved once again.
Or as Yogi Berra said, “It’s Deja vu all over again!”
cheers
DSD sends
One comment I read above that did strike home from a basic principle of artistic design. That is the principle of unity throughout the design. If one looks at Laurent’s work one will see the trunks are as wildly curved as the branches... creating unity in his designs. No matter what one does to design a tree, they should at least adhere to the principles and elements of design to maximize the aesthetic value of a design.
btw Laurent actually says he changed the name of Burton bonsai technique to Cosmic Bonsai due to not wanting to get sued by Tim Burton.
If Laurent actually copied the Octopus aesthetic he took the design to a higher level and at least gave it a goal and kept the trees healthy while doing so.
There are plenty of valid points here and a good discussion of breaking away from and distaste for the cookie cutter Japanese model. Yet once at an exhibition (from my perspective) trees are generally judged mostly on adhering to key principles and elements of Japanese bonsai design. (Also awards are mostly given to those who have professionals style and coif their trees, but that’s beside the point).
Folks may differ in their aesthetic taste, yet no matter how far they seem to stray, folks always seems to devolve to utilizing a core of these elements. Maybe that’s the extent our art can be taken.…. Dig up a tree, do something wild to it, then bring it back into the Japanese wheelhouse.…is this different, or just a variation on a theme. If that’s the extent of bonsai as an art, it’s a crying shame.
Dave De Groot said something along these lines, “If an artist does something unconventional and folks like this, the artist makings variations on this theme. At this point each becomes a crafting project.” Sound familiar? r ar
As much as folks want to change, the majority keep pushing away folks that somehow don’t meet these criteria. In an echo from the past it’s no wonder Dan Robinson was not invited back to the big SoCal exhibitions after demoing his chainsaw technique to the dismissive crowd there years ago. Only to laud Kimura for doing the very same thing 20 years later, but with a Japanese vs naturalistic finish.
One step forward and another back. Status quo preserved once again.
Or as Yogi Berra said, “It’s Deja vu all over again!”
cheers
DSD sends