News
This specific type of flower arranging has evolved into a highly respected art form that reflects the Japanese aesthetic sense and philosophy. In recent years a new wave of modern ikebana ...
Japanese flower arrangement, known as ikebana or kadō (the way of the flower), developed into a distinctive artform in the late fifteenth century. Today, there are an array of styles and ...
The primary difference between western flower arrangement and Ikebana is the use of space, says Mayumi Chino. (Rick Bremness/CBC) "I call it a moving meditation, that why it's so peaceful." ...
Ikebana is the Japanese art of flower arranging. It’s a tradition that goes back centuries, and its design principles are governed by specific rules and techniques. But as with any art ...
Ikebana is the Japanese art of flower arranging, its oldest type — ikenobo ikebana — more than 550 years old. Modern gardeners can take a lot away from the art form. “Ikebana makes us more ...
Ikebana is a Japanese word that translates to ‘ way of flowers’. It is a traditional form of art that arranges flowers and other natural elements beautifully. Ikebana is more than just putting ...
Life and beauty are transitory, Kawana says. His work serves to concentrate that life and beauty in an ikebana arrangement or installation, but "it is for that time and place only," he says.
The Harrisburg area's chapter of the Ikebana International flower-arranging organization is marking its 60 th anniversary with a special program and luncheon in Camp Hill on Sept. 12. The ...
BOYLSTON —The graceful line of a branch, the perfect placement of bronze chrysanthemums and seed pods, each of the ikebana arrangements at Tower Hill Botanical Garden's Ikebana International ...
And nowhere is this simplicity more clearly demonstrated than in the distinct art of flower arrangement in Japanese culture that is known the world over as Ikebana. Ikebana is a disciplined art ...
The ikebana exhibition by the students and teachers of Lahore Sogetsu Study Group, exhibited their spring arrangements titled “Mughal Architecture through the eyes of Sogetsu Ikebana”.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results