Alexandre Gervais

Japanese Rock Garden, Kyoto (Japan)

Japanese Rock Garden, Kyoto (Japan)

Japanese gardens are a living work of art in which the plants and trees are ever changing with the seasons. As they grow and mature, they are constantly sculpted to maintain and enhance the overall experience; hence, a Japanese garden is never the same and never really finished. The underlying structure of a Japanese garden is determined by the architecture; that is, the framework of enduring elements such as buildings, verandas and terraces, paths, tsukiyama (artificial hills), and stone compositions. Over time, it is only as good as the careful maintenance that it receives by those skilled in the art of training and pruning. Part of the art is to keep the garden almost static, like a painting.Wikipedia

  • Camera: NIKON D60
  • Mode: Manual
  • ISO: 100
  • Aperture: f/1.4
  • Exposure: 1/500 sec
  • Focal Length: 50 mm
  • Flash: No Flash

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  • I've always wanted a rock garden; they're so peaceful to me. I have this really strange fear though... that something will occur and I'll have to walk through it. What if my phone is on the other side and it rings? I guess I need one of those old school above ground houses, like from the Edo period :-P
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