Showing posts with label sawa gentan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sawa gentan. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2024

The Garden at Kokokuji Temple

 


The top ranked garden in Japan, according to the Journal of Japanese Gardening, is consistently the Adachi Museum Gardens in Shimane.


Other gardens in Shimane are in the list of top Japanese gardens, including this one at Kokuji Temple near Hirata in the Izumo area.


In 2005 it was ranked 8th, and in 2006 it was ranked 12th.


And yet it is barely known and rarely visited.


Kokokuji is a Rinzai temple founded in the 14th century.


The garden, however, was created in the early 19th century.


It is a relatively small garden consisting primarily of a dry garden with Kinkyoike, a small resevoir behind it.


The borrowed scenery is completed with Mount Tabushi and the Kitayama mountains behind.


The garden was designed by Sawa Gentan, the gardener employed by the great Tea Master Fumai Matsudaira who ruled the Matsue Domain.


Many other gardens in the area are said to have been designed by Sawa Gentan, including the magnificent ones at Hirata Honjin, literally just a couple of kilometers away. Several gardens at the Izumo Cultural Heritage Museum, and the Gesshoji Temple Garden are also attributed to Fumai and Gentan


The small entrance fee to view the garden includes a green tea and sweet, photo 3 above.


This, and many other gardens in the region are known as Izumo Style, and sometimes Gentan Style.


One of the features of Izumo style is that the stepping stones are a combination of round and rectangular.


Another feature mentioned by many is that an Izumo style garden will be a combination of a traditional garden and a Teahouse garden.


Hidden away on the right hand side of the garden here is a teahouse, and the stone path leads to it.


There are a lot of other gardens in the Matsue and Izumo region, including many I have not covered yet. If yiu are interested please let me know. Yuushien, Meimei-an Teahouse, Lafcadio Hearns House, Yakumo Honjin, and the several already mentioned earlier, are just a few already covered...


Next I will cover Kokokuji Temple itself....