Source: Bonsai Tonight
Taikan-ten – awesome bonsai
I hope it’s been obvious from my recent posts, but in case it isn’t, I’d like to underscore the fact that the great bonsai exhibits in Japan feature some really great trees. The Taikan-ten in Kyoto is the second largest exhibit in Japan and it always includes some outstanding trees. Special displays feature Kokufu and Sakufu prize-winners. These are typically very large and very old bonsai. It can be difficult to keep such trees healthy, let alone move them from one bench to another. Their beauty reflects not only great bonsai skill, but also great caring as their maintenance over long periods of time requires considerable resources.
Although the show isn’t organized by size or variety, I’ve taken license in presenting like groups of trees for dramatic effect. Doing this helps remind me just how many fantastic pines, for instance, the show contained.
I hope you enjoy the photos below, and I’d like to wish you all a happy new year! I appreciate your readership and engaged comments – they mean a lot to me. To borrow a phrase from Peter Tea, thanks for reading!
Japanese black pine from Mr. Moriyama’s collection
Japanese black pine – work by a Daiju-en graduate
Japanese black pine – from Mr. Moriyama’s collection
Japanese black pine
Japanese black pine displayed at this year’s Gomangoku
Japanese black pine
Semi-cascade Japanese black pine
Japanese black pine on a rock
Cascade Japanese black pine
Japanese white pine from Mr. Moriyama’s collection – one of the trees I helped prepare for the exhibit
Japanese white pine
Japanese white pine – although the pot looks new, it’s likely over 100 years old
Japanese white pine – a great conversation piece
Japanese white pine
Hemlock – a favorite among many Taikan-ten visitors
Formal upright hinoki bonsai
Ezo spruce
Ezo spruce
Needle juniper
Shimpaku
Shimpaku
Shiimpaku
Roughbark Japanese maple
Trident maple – from Mr. Moriyama’s collection
Japanese winterberry – work by a Daiju-en graduate
Japanese maple
Ginkgo
Korean hornbeam
Japanese maple – possibly shishigashira
Japanese flowering quince – ‘Chojubai’
Kadsura
Satsuki azalea
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