Monthly Archives: May 2019

Obon in the Gardens

Here is a link to the flyer for Obon in the Gardens on Saturday, June 1, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

2019 Obon in the Garden

Here is a link to Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens newsletter for June:

Newsletter June 2019

For those of you who may have missed the May newsletter, here is a link:

Newsletter May 2019

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Historic Hawai`i Foundation workshops coming soon

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The workshops are provided in cooperation with
the National Park Service.
Apologies in advance for any cross postings of this email.
Copyright © 2019 HISTORIC HAWAII, All rights reserved.

The Hilo workshop on Monday, June 10, will feature Lili`uokalani Gardens as one of three case studies.

 

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News from New York

https://www.noguchi.org/programs/public/noguchi-talks-marc-keane-and-matthew-kirsch-japanese-gardens-may-11-2019

NOGUCHI TALKS

Marc Keane and Matthew Kirsch on Japanese Gardens

Saturday, May 11, 3 pm

The Japanese Garden is made from a collaboration with nature … Man’s hands are hidden by time and the many effects of nature, moss and so forth, so you are hidden. I don’t want to be hidden. I want to show. Therefore I am modern. ISAMU NOGUCHI*

Join Marc Keane, landscape architect and garden scholar, and Matthew Kirsch, Curator of Research at The Noguchi Museum, for a discussion about the Japanese garden as both inspiration and point of departure for Isamu Noguchi in the later decades of his career. In 1950, nineteen years after his first visits to temples in Kyoto and Nara, Noguchi traveled to each again, with artist and writer Saburo Hasegawa guiding his visits to Zen temples and to the Katsura Imperial Villa. Their experiences were framed by their shared search for inspiration in Japan’s cultural past, which they hoped could be reinterpreted in modern practice. The Japanese garden exemplified this promise: an aesthetic culture with its own set of guidelines and precepts which, rather than stifling creativity and innovation, extended possibilities within a tradition.

Following the talk, please join us in the Museum Shop for a book signing featuring Marc Keane’s Japanese Garden Notes: A Visual Guide to Elements and Design (Stone Bridge Press, 2016).

This event coincides with Changing and Unchanging Things: Noguchi and Hasegawa in Postwar Japan (on view through July 14), a major traveling exhibition that traces influences of the dialogue between Isamu Noguchi and Saburo Hasegawa through their respective works.

Free with admission. RSVP recommended to publicprograms@noguchi.org.

RSVP
IMAGES, FROM TOP
Shisen-do Temple, Kyoto. Photograph by Marc Peter Keane; from Japanese Garden Notes: A Visual Guide to Elements and Design (Stone Bridge Press, 2016). Courtesy of the author.Saburo Hasegawa and Isamu Noguchi at Shisen-do Temple, 1950. Photograph by Michio Noguchi. The Noguchi Museum Archive. ©INFGM/ARSHojo garden at Tofuku-ji Temple, Kyoto, by Mirei Shigemori. Photograph by Marc Peter Keane; from Japanese Garden Notes: A Visual Guide to Elements and Design (Stone Bridge Press, 2016). Courtesy of the author.

Isamu Noguchi, Round Square Space, 1970. Indian granite. Photograph by Kevin Noble. ©INFGM/ARS

*Rhony Alhalel, “A Conversation with Isamu Noguchi,” Kyoto Journal 10, Spring 1989, p 35.

The Noguchi Museum
9-01 33rd Road (at Vernon Boulevard)
Long Island City, NY 11106noguchi.org | 718.204.7088Public programs at The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum are supported, in part, with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council and from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
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