Super-Sized Penjing & Our Summer Bonsai Book Sale Is About to End

bigpenjingThis super-sized three part penjing is by Robert Steven; renowned bonsai artist, teacher and author, and frequent contributor to this blog. It's worth noting that this is freshly planted, so you might imagine what it would like after things settled and filled out.

Every time I see this magnificent Penjing planting, I want to share it. For this and other reasons, this is the third time for this post, though the original photos have been enlarge to fit our newer format and a couple new cropped versions have been added. I’ve also stuck some pertinent books in to remind you that our Big Summer Book Sale is about to end (tomorrow night, Sunday at 11:59pm EDT). The original post is from December 2011.

 

B1MISSION

Robert Steven's now famous second bonsai book (the first is currently out of print). Robert's bonsai are exciting and inspirational and will light blazing fires in the mind of any bonsai lover. List price is 55.00. Now only 36.00 with our normal discount plus our 25% off Book Sale.

In Robert Steven’s own words
“This is a super large penjing I did two weeks ago. The total length is three meters (about 10 feet). I combined three large special-order white marble trays in the arrangement in order to give a unique presentation in perspective and composition. The mountains were made of real rocks by a friend who hollowed some areas for planting the trees (Triphasia trifolia, aka Limeberry). The problem was to find a background for the photo, finally got it….”

 

This photo offers a little perspective.

 

B1PENJINGTwo of the greatest living Penjing artists are Robert and Zhao Qingquan. This beautiful book covers simply everything you want to know about Penjing, including design, care, categories, techniques and much more. List price 26.95, now only 18.71 with our normal discount plus our 25% off Book Sale.

 

bigpenjingcu

Blown up and a little fuzzy, but still, a closer look. You can see and appreciate the range of colors and textures a bit more.

 

bigpenjingcu2The other pieces.

 

B1LITERATIcover

One more book that we really like. It's both a practical how-to bonsai book and an exploration of its history, aesthetic, styles and preservation of the art of Literati bonsai/penjing. List price 28.95. Now only 17.96 with our normal discount plus our 25% off Book Sale.

The Sun Almost Never Gets Too Hot Here in Northern Vermont, but It Just Might Where You Live

suthin11Deciduous Award at the 2012 U.S. National Bonsai Exhibition for the Finest Deciduous Bonsai. It's a Japanese Maple by Suthin Sukolosovisit of Royal Bonsai. It has nothing to do with the topic of this post, at least directly, but the 3rd (2012) U.S. National Bonsai Exhibiton Album and all of our other books are now on special at Stone Lantern.
Michael’s font of bonsai wisdom: The following very useful piece of summer advice is by Michael Hagedorn from his Crataegus Bonsai.

When the sun gets too hot…

July 16, 2015 by Crataegus

“There are various ways of helping our bonsai cope with sun and not literally cooking them on our benches in the summertime. They are in pots, but it doesn’t mean we want to fry a special root dish, in a soil sauce…

“Because bonsai are in pots, they are very unlike trees in the ground. We want to reduce any similarities to a dog in a car on a hot day.

thFry your bonsai it can, without cooking oil…

“There are two situations… A cooler climate with rare spikes in temperature to 100 F / 38 C or higher that might last a few days, and then there are the hot summer areas that are always that high…”
For the rest of the article, visit Crataegus Bonsai.

BTW: if you’ve never visited Michael’s Crataegus Bonsai, you’re missing some of the best writing and most useful bonsai information on the web. Speaking of writing, Michael is the author of one of our favorite bonsai books: Post-Dated – The Schooling of an Irreverent Bonsai Monk.

 

b1shohingwatering-300x1971Photo from Shohin Bonsai by Morten Albek. Published by Stone Lantern.
TJWANDA Watering Wand is an excellent idea. As is a Fog-It nozzle (not shown here but available at Stone Lantern).

An Astonishingly Eccentric Two Headed Monster

shimpCalligraphy anyone? I think this is the third time we've shown this astonishingly eccentric two headed monster, but it's been about four years, which means many of you haven't seen it, and I think everyone should have at least one chance. I don't know its full history, but I do know that it appeared on The Art of Bonsai Project in a post titled The Bonsai of Mario Komsta, as did all the photos shown in this post. Yixing pot.

Once again it’s time for Mario Komsta (Super Mario), one of Europe’s and the world’s new wave of younger bonsai artists. Many of these up and comers, including Mario, have apprenticed in Japan. The skills and sensibilities they are bringing back to the West are a big reason for the relatively recent dramatic progress in Western bonsai.

All the photos shown here are borrowed from The Art of Bonsai Project.

horn

If this Hornbeam were a full size tree, you might be able to walk through the hole. Tokoname pot.

 

shim2

Another Shimpaku, this time with antlers. It may not be as eccentric as the one above, but it's pretty distinctive. You might notice that it lacks some of the more conventional bonsai features (taper, or more or less evenly radiant surface roots for example), but to my eye it doesn't matter. Yixing pot.

 

densi

This Japanese red pine (Pinus densiflora) is a more or less a conventional informal upright bonsai with great movement and compelling deadwood that looks like it has been freshly painted with lime sulfur (deadwood is less common on pines than junipers as it tends to rot faster which means it requires more effort to keep it). Tokoname pot.

 

jwpJapanese white pine. Another informal upright with deadwood and another hole. From this perspective the deadwood doesn't look aged, so you might imagine that the carving is fresh. Yixing pot.

 

baccata

More deadwood, this time more aged. This one is a Japanese yew (Taxus bacatta). The pot is a Tokoname.

 

Rich in Bonsai Wisdom & Advanced How-to Articles

ponrn

Eric Schrader's caption for this photo reads: "At Ryan Neil’s place the Ponderosa were all about the twists and deadwood." Ryan Neil is the artist behind the wonders of Bonsai Mirai and Eric Schrader is a five star bonsai blogger.

I just discovered a phenomenal bonsai blog. It’s called phutu and it belongs to Eric Schrader (Eric lives in San Francisco and is involved in the Bonsai Society of San Francisco as a volunteer and teacher). I don’t understand how I missed phutu for so long, especially considering Eric has been posting regularly since 2003.

I encourage you to pay phutu a visit. Not only is it rich in valuable bonsai wisdom and lore, it’s also a great source of advanced how-to articles. All supported by excellent high-quality photos.

The photos shown here are from a phutu post on Ponderosa pines titled Postcards from Portland: Part One (May, 2015).

 

ponmh

Eric's caption: "Another great Ponderosa in Michael’s garden." The Michael is Michael Hagedorn, an American bonsai artist, teacher and author par excellence.

 

cones

Ponderosa needles, buds and cones. This photo and the two above are from phutu.

Three pertinent books…

 B1PON-2The only Ponderosa Pine Bonsai Book is now 25% off our already discounted price, as our all of our Bonsai Books.

 

B1POST for webMichael Hagedorn's Post Dated. Still the best bonsai read

 

B1PINE-680Our Masters Series Pine book. Now 25% off our discounted price, as are all of our bonsai books (but only until Sunday night).

More Bougainvillea Bonsai but More Elegant & Less Showy this Time

42-770There's something about a beautiful bonsai in flower. If you let your eyes linger for a few moments, you'll notice how the seemingly perfectly placed flowers enhance the power of the tree rather than overwhelm it. It's a bougainvillea by Robert Steven. All this photos in this post are from Robert's facebook gallery.

Yesterday we featured three Bougainvillea Bonsai. The first two were covered with brilliant flowers (actually bracts) and the third was less showy, more like the two you see here. From a purely bonsai perspective, these two are splendid and elegant, with or without flowers, though the flowers they do have complement the beauty of each tree.

The four photos and most of text featured here are from a post we did back in 2012.

Always a pleasure
It has been a while since we’ve featured the bonsai of Robert Steven. In addition to being one of the foremost bonsai artists and teachers on this fierce and lovely planet, Robert is also a friend. Not in the ordinary sense of buddies you hang out with, but in the sense of someone you’ve gotten to know and respect over a long period of doing business together (we sell his books and his Bonsai Aesthetics tools and wire, and he provides free bonsai critiques and other material that we feature on this post). Beyond mutual benefit, genuine trust and loyalty has developed. This doesn’t always happen in long term business relations, but it’s always a pleasure when it does.

 

13-770Another Bougainvillea with just enough flowers. In this case it's a full cascade with a somewhat unusual sweep that starts on one side of the pot and finishes on the other.
10-770Ficus root-on-rock style on a penjing tray. Aside from the power and beauty of this tree clinging to a rock with almost no soil in sight, there's the added interest of the way its two trunks are connected by that strong trunk/root in the center.
72-770Another planting on a penjing tray. This one offers a whole scene with trees, rocks, land, grass and water. Though it looks like it might be fairly easy to create this type of scene, an ample dose of expertise goes into making one that creates such a natural sense of scale, dynamic balance and tranquility (forgive me for the somewhat pedantic dynamic balance; what I mean to say is that though the scene is quite tranquil, it isn't exactly static; there's a subtle sense of movement that invites your eye to freely move from one side to the other and back again... oh well...).

More shameless promotion. We’re don’t usually advertise quite so blatantly as yesterday and now today. But bear with us, we’ll return to our old low-key ways tomorrow.

B1MISSION

Mission of Transformation, Robert Steven’s brilliant opus magnus is now 25% off our regular discounted price, as are all of our bonsai books.

Tools - gardenNEW Sale, 20% off all Japanese and other Gardening Tools (including our Okatsune tools). Plus an extra 10% off orders of 100.00 or more

 

B1-NEWBooksOur 25% Book Sale ends in less than a week, so don't wait too long and miss this great opportunity to upgrade your bonsai library

 

Watering Cans

Our 10% off Watering Can Sale ends tonight at 11:59pm EDT
 and our 20% off Embroidered Bonsai Clothing Sale also ends tonight

EMCAPS

Plus an extra 10% all orders of 100.00 or more

Boug Bonsai, That Gorgeously Gaudy Wonder Plant

club

Bougainvilleas can be a little ostentatious, even gaudy at times, and this one just might qualify. Still, ostentatious, gaudy, whatever, this lush combination of flowers, aged character and power is magnificent. The photo is from the Club de Bonsaistas (facebook).

Bougs! That gorgeously gaudy semi-tropical wonder plant that seems to grace half the walls of the southern regions of our world. Turns out they make great bonsai too.

 

salvatoreThe power of the trunk rivals the brilliance of the flowers on this one. And then there's that pot (anybody know anything about it?). I found this on Salvatore Liporace's facebook feed a while back. We've featured Salvatore several times here on Bark and will no doubt feature him again.

 

troutNot so ostentatious but more elegant and lonely, clinging to cliff on some tropical island (well, actually in Florida, gracing Ed Trout's bonsai collection). Is that a coconut?

 

mygreece

One of those southern walls. From My Greece Travel blog.

 

dreamtime

This one is designed to make me jealous. I don't have to tell you who the photo belongs to.

Okay, as long as we’re showing travel ads, we might as well nod to our own sponsor

Tools - gardenNEW Sale, 20% off all Japanese and other Gardening Tools (including our Okatsune tools). Plus an extra 10% off orders of 100.00 or more

 

B1-NEWBooksOur 25% Book Sale ends in less than a week, so don’t wait too long and miss this great opportunity to upgrade your bonsai library

 

Watering Cans

Our 10% off Watering Can Sale ends tonight at 11:59pm EDT
and our 20% off Embroidered Bonsai Clothing Sale also ends tonight

EMCAPS

Plus an extra 10% all orders of 100.00 or more

Bonsai News Flash!

ryanpacific

We featured this dramatic Sierra juniper here on Bark back in January. This time though, after a long journey from the wilds of the Sierra Nevadas to Ryan Neil's Bonsai Mirai, it's made the national bonsai news.

We just got an email announcement from The Pacific Bonsai Museum: Here it is, almost word for word:

“The Pacific Bonsai Museum proudly announces its first acquisition, a Sierra Juniper by rising bonsai artist Ryan Neil of St. Helens, Oregon. The acquisition was made possible by a generous gift from The Greater Tacoma Community Foundation. Here’s a link to the press release for the acquisition and several high resolution photos.”

pacific

Outdoor display at the Pacific Bonsai Museum.
RobinsonHornbeamPRBC20121This wild and wonderful Hornbeam originally belonged to Dan Robinson, and now resides at the Pacific Bonsai Museum. It was also featured here on Bark back in 2012. The photo is from Bonsai Otaku (little trees for big geeks).

Bonsai Detective Contest

baldcypress5trees

Bonsai number 1

Here’s a simple contest to amuse you on your summer vacation.

What you have to do to win
Identify the variety and the owner of each tree shown here and provide a link to your source. Hint: I found them all on Pinterest.

The prize
The first person to get them all right (with links) will win a $100 gift certificate to Stone Lantern. If no gets all eight correct by the deadline, then the first person to get seven correct will win.

The Deadline
The contest will run for two weeks (until Saturday July 25th at 11:59pm EDT), unless someone gets them all correct before that time.

Email me
Your answers must be sent to me <wayne@stonelantern.com> (DON’T PUT YOUR ANSWERS IN THE COMMENTS BELOW!). The subject line should say $100 Contest. If you can’t identify at least seven, please don’t email me (my inbox is already a local disaster).

Good luck!

 

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Number 2

 

airial

Number 3

 

grapes

Number 4

 

4in1

Number 5 (upper left)                                                         Number 6 (upper right)
Number 7 (lower left)                                                         Number 8 (lower right)

 

You no doubt figured out that one of the trees above is a Satsuki Azalea

b1satsuki

Book Sale: 25% off all Books at Stone Lantern
Plus an additional 10% off for orders 100.00 or more

20 Thoughts on Bunjin Bonsai – Without a Doubt the Best Discussion We’ve Ever Had

D2Would you call this a Bunjin style bonsai? Whatever you call it, you don't see too many bonsai that look like this. Even most bunjin are not quite like this; most are conifers and most don't have such a meandering array of multiple trunks, especially multiple crossing trunks. And then there's the leaf size (is this a Sumac?).

Without a doubt… Back to our the archives. But not to just any old post; this one from 2012 provoked what was and still is, without a doubt, the best discussion we’ve ever had (in six and a half years and over 1,000 posts). It’s included, word for word (blow by blow) in its full splendor below the line at the bottom of this post. I invite you to take a look.

I’ve long had a soft spot for the type of bonsai shown here. The uncontrived elegance that shows no concern for our current interest in muscular trunks, wide nebaris, carved wood… even most bunjin bonsai don’t quite go where these trees seem to go (Kyuzo Murata‘s early to mid-twentieth century Japan comes to mind).

All the trees in this post were on display at the Hanyu Uchikutei Exhibition. The photos were all lifted from Michael Bonsai’s facebook photos. I cropped and enlarged them for more close-up views. Thus the slightly fuzzy effect on some.

 

D1I think you would call this graceful beauty (full moon maple?) a bunjin, though you don't see many upright bunjin in cascade pots (or upright bonsai of any type in cascade pots), let alone deciduous bunjin. Speaking of the pot...

 

D3Such a heavy pot for such thin trunks is not something you see every day. Is this a type of Lilac?

 

D7This one is a little closer to what you might expect in a bunjin style bonsai. After all, it's a conifer. But still, there's something quite unique about it. It reminds me of the tall narrow pines you see driving though central Florida.

 

D6Too subtle? I wonder if many bonsai enthusiasts would give a tree like this a second look. Is it another Full moon maple?

The comments from the original post are below.

Continue reading 20 Thoughts on Bunjin Bonsai – Without a Doubt the Best Discussion We’ve Ever Had

Bonsai Floating in Space

toan

Floating in space. Is it just me or is there something strange about the lack of physical support in this photo? The photo also seems to lack depth which might contribute to the strange effect. Still, there's something enchanting about the tree and the way it's presented.

Black backgrounds. We recently ran a post about choosing a background color with black backgrounds being a favorite of many of our readers. The photos in that post belong to Walter Pall who live in Europe (Germany). In this case the photos are from Viet Nam.

I picked up the photos shown here from Toan Dola’s facebook feed a while back, but when I returned this morning, I couldn’t find them. So I can’t say with any certainty who the trees and photos belong to. As mentioned above, the photos are from Viet Nam (at least I believe they are) and to my eye, there are some similarities to other Vietnamese bonsai we have featured.

 

toan8

Too much contrast? Nevertheless a wonderfully distinctive bonsai.

 

toan3

Even more wonderful and distinctive? The deadwood on other side is impressive, but I'd have to go with this side as the front.

 

toan6

Another one floating in space, with an almost invisible trace of support. Not too much depth here either but I love this snaky tree.

 

toan5

I've only seen this distinctively darkened deadwood on Vietnamese bonsai.

 

toan4

When it comes to darkened deadwood, I think I prefer this reddish brown color rather than the almost black deadwood above.

 

B1DEADWOODWhile we're on the topic of deadwood.... You can buy this phenomenal new book and any other book at Stone Lantern for 25% off right now.