Black Pine Critique by Robert Steven 10/25/10

Duong-Simulated

Robert Steven’s simulation of a Japanese black pine that was submitted by Tom Duong (see below for Tom’s original).

Where’s yours?
Email us a photo of your bonsai and we’ll submit it to Robert Steven for a critique. So far about ten people have dared and have learned something about their bonsai in the process. Now it’s your turn.

duongorig

Tom’s original photo that was submitted to Robert. Tom also submitted a back, left, right and top view. Even though Robert requested these, very few submissions have included them. While we are on the topic; when photographing bonsai it’s always a good idea to include the whole pot in your photo and to try to make the background as clean and uniform as possible.

Robert’s critique

Issues:

Although there is shari on the trunk, this bonsai looks young. This is because it doesn’t have the ramification (branching) structure of a mature tree. Also, the foliage is not well trained and refined. Although the artist has tried to bend down the branches to suggest an old tree, the apex is still that of a young tree and doesn’t fit with the overall design.

There’s a lack of visual balance due to the improper placement of the crown in relation to the trunk line and movement and the branch formation.

The pot is too big.

Solutions:

The shari on the trunk looks like an accident rather than suggesting an aging effect. In order to create a more natural look, I would turn the apex into jin and connect that with a shari that winds down the trunk and links with the lower shari.

Form a flatter apex to impart a more accurate story of how this tree would be formed in nature. There are natural forces that kill the apex which creates the jin. This jin starts dying down creating the shari. These same natural forces also flatten the crown and bend down the branches.

Develop the ramification (fine branching) so the tree will look mature.

Improve the composition to obtain better visual balance. (Robert doesn’t elaborate this point, but I think if you look at his simulation, you’ll get his drift).

Use a smaller pot.

General comments
There is more than one way to design any bonsai and my critiques and recommended solutions might not always fit your taste because of personal preferences. But I always try to give my opinion based on artistic and horticultural principles.

To understand my concepts better, please read my books Vision of My Soul and Mission of Transformation which are available at Stone Lantern.

You can also visit my bonsai blog.


Show Comments

4 thoughts on “Black Pine Critique by Robert Steven

  1. I have just begun a study of bonsai and have attempted to develope a black pine. This critique has been extremely helpful as I seem to be the only person interested in black pine in my area (Texas southern coast). I look forward to ore of this type of critical observations. Not yet brave enough to send in a photo – but soon.

  2. Wayne,

    I think Robert’s critiques have been spot on up to this point. One observation though: the trees that have been submitted are relatively young. I’ve seen Robert’s website and his trees are in a very advanced state of refinement. To achieve these kind of results you need good, often old starting material. The other point is that Robert’s trees are very often old yamadori (e.g., Santigi that are 3-400 y/o) or really good starting material that he has selected because of his skill at selecting good “potensai” and producing a naturalized look equivalent to the talents of Dan Robinson, Nick Lenz, Walter Pall or Masahiko Kimura (yes, I think Mr. Steven’s trees are that good). So, may I respectfully suggest that people who are making these submissions submit their more mature, advanced trees and not trees that will need another 10, 20, 30 years to rate high by Robert Steven’s standards.

    Respectfully,
    Owen Wightman

  3. Thanks Linda. Happy to see you like what Robert is doing. We’ll try to keep ’em coming, but we need help from the other side of the equation (reader’s trees).

  4. Thanks Owen. But that’s fine because not everyone are so lucky to have good materials; yet to make goos bonsai from good material is normal, but how to make good bonsai from “junk” material ?

    The objective of this forum is to let people learn the concept and approach I am using so they can improve their bonsai or make good bonsai from any material.

    If you apply well my concept, you can create a mature-tree look bonsai from pre-mature material..you need to know the plant physiology and morphology concept I use for designing bonsai (please read my second book “Mission of Transformation”).

Comments are closed.