Long Beach, Califronia

Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden

La Cañada Flintridge

Descanso Gardens

San Diego, California

Japanese Friendship Garden

Saratoga, California

Hakone Garden

Phoenix, Arizona

Japanese Friendship Garden

 

 

 

 

Music, dance and flowers set stage for Descanso’s Japanese Garden Festival, Nov 4-5

 

Cultural News    October 2006

 

Descanso’s Japanese Garden (Courtesy of Descanso Gardens)

 

Rich autumn colors, traditional dance and music, a dazzling display of chrysanthemums and koi swimming in tranquil waters will set the mood for Descanso Gardens’ elegant Japanese Garden Festival Nov. 4 and 5 at La Cañada Flintridge near Los Angeles .

 

The weekend will be filled with music and art paying homage to the graceful, indelible mark Japanese-American culture has made to this area and, in particular, to Descanso Gardens.

 

Each day visitors will marvel at the beauty and variety of the traditional autumn flower, the chrysanthemum, during an exhibit from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Van de Kamp Hall.  Extraordinary flowers will be displayed and sold by the Descanso Chrysanthemum Society.

 

Also on both days, traditional tea services will be demonstrated by students and instructor from the Urasenki Tradition of Tea. The fee is $2 per person and first-come, first-served registration will begin at 9 a.m. each morning at the Minka in the Japanese Garden.  Indoor tea times will be at 10, 10:40 and 11:20 a.m. and at noon at the Minka. 

 

Unless rain falls, outdoor tea times will be at 10, 10:40 and 11:20 a.m.

 

In addition to the tea demonstrations, the Full Moon Tea House will offer a la carte service from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.  In addition, a sit-down, Full Moon Tea Service will be offered from 1 to 3 p.m. for $16.50 per person.  Reservations for the sit-down tea service should be made in advance by calling (818) 790-3663.

 

On Saturday, Nov. 4, experts will focus the “Spotlight on Mums” at Magnolia Lawn, with tips and ideas on how to select, care for and grow these beautiful plants. And a special origami workshop, offered by members of the OSULA’s Japanese Language and Culture Program, will be presented from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at the Main Lawn.

 

The musical contrast between the power and grace of Japan will fill the Under the Oaks Theater during the weekend.

 

Stirring taiko drummers of Kishin Diako will perform at from 1 to 1:30 p.m. Saturday and will invite the audience to try a hand at drummimg and take photos from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m.

 

On Sunday, costumed members of Madam Fujima Kansuma’s renowned Japanese dance troupe will take to the stage from 2 to 2:30 p.m. for a narrated performance of traditional dance. On both days non-traditional tea and cookies will be available at the Japanese Garden Teahouse.

 

Descanso Gardens is at 1418 Descanso Drive, La Cañada Flintridge, near the interchange of the #2 and #210 freeways. The Gardens are open 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily except Christmas Day. Parking is free. Admission fees are $7 for adults; $5 for seniors and students; $2 for children 5 to 12, and free for members and children 5 and younger.  Fees for classes and programs include Gardens admission. For information call (818) 949-4200 or visit www.DescansoGardens.org. Descanso Gardens is accredited by the American Association of Museums.                                                   

 

Japanese Garden Chrysanthemum Show, Sunday, October 29, 12 – 4 p.m.

 

October 29, 2006

 

The Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden in California State University, Long Beach, presented the Chrysanthemum Show and Tea Ceremony & Tea Tasting on Sunday, Oct. 29, from 12 – 4 p.m.

 

 

The formal Japanese tea ceremony in the garden teahouse was performed by the Satomi Kai with Mme. Tomiko Numano of the Urasenke School of Tea to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the garden. When the Japanese garden opened in 1981, Mme. Numano performed the tea ceremony.

 

The highlight of the Chrysanthemum Show was two Kiku Ningyo (Chrysanthemum Doll), life-size dolls decorated with chrysanthemum flowers. This is the second year, the garden displayed Kiku Ningyo in the show.

 

Miyamairi* (newborn infant’s shrine visit) was the theme of this year to celebrate the birth of the heir in Japan’s royal family. Unlike the tradition, the husband of Kiku Ningyo who held the baby was standing with his wife.

 

Chrysanthemum flowers were placed over the dolls by CSU Long Beach student volunteers and Long Beach City College Horticulture Club.

 

Chrysanthemum blooms was assembled and displayed by the nationally juried Chrysanthemum Society of Orange County.

 

 

*Miyamairi: About thirty days after a child is born, it is taken to a Shinto shrine for its first shrine visit. This is called miyamairi.

  Miyamairi used to be an important event by which the children became a parishioner of a Shinto shrine as its first step toward becoming a member of society. However, nowdays it tends to be practiced only formally.

 

   

  

Japanese garden grows into its full maturity over 25 years

Cultural News, April 2006

 

<Photo>

The Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden in the campus of California State University Long Beach, has grown into its maturity over 25 years by supports of Japanese cultural enthusiasts and Japanese American community. (Cultural News Photo)

               

By Chris Aihara

 

  Tucked away on the campus of California State University Long Beach, the Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden is one of the most beautiful and widely utilized public gardens in southern California. 

 

  In 2005, more than 60,000 visitors walked the 1.3 acre garden, attending a public program, private event, school tour or campus related activity. First time visitors entering through the garden’s unobtrusive gate are always taken by surprise by the startling beauty of the garden space.

 

  Dedicated in memory of her late husband, Earl Burns Miller, Long Beach philanthropist and supporter of the arts, Loraine Miller Collins, gifted the construction of the garden to the university in 1981. The garden celebrates its 25th anniversary this year.  Her intention was to create a public place of tranquil and natural beauty to counter the concrete, noise and traffic of contemporary suburban life. 

 

 Loraine Miller’s interest and generosity in building a garden in the Japanese style, is an illustration of the on-going interest of Westerners in the culture of Japan. 

 

 In our contemporary lives where things Japanese like sushi, karate and anime have become integrated into American, at least California lifestyle, it is worth noting that Western interest in things Japanese has historically had peaks of high interest, beginning in the 19th century with the influence of Japonisme on European and North American art, as in the paintings of Monet and Van Gogh.  At the turn of the 20th century, Japanese gardens appeared in every world expo from Vienna to San Francisco.

 

  According to Dr. Kendall Brown of CSULB, who has written extensively on Japanese gardens in the U.S., --  At the turn of the century, and then again in the early 1960s, America witnessed a Japanese invasion in landscape architecture… it is no exaggeration to say that in the twentieth century more large scale public ‘Japanese gardens’ were built outside Japan than within.  The great bulk of these are located in North America, particularly along the Pacific coast.

 

 Japanese Americans and the Japanese American community have played and continue to play a significant role in the construction, maintenance and support of Japanese gardens in the U.S. 

 

 In many instances, Japanese Americans engaged in the creation of a Japanese garden as a means of promoting cultural understanding, maintaining their own cultural identity and making a contribution to the civic life of the community overall. 

 

  The Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden is no exception. The original designer of the garden was Ed Lovell, ASLA, CSULB Landscape Architect. However, in the early years of the garden’s completion, noted Japanese garden designer, Koichi Kawana was brought in for consultation and played a key role in the placement of stones. 

 

 Currently the Earl Burns Miller Garden’s cache of trees is maintained by the support of several Japanese American organizations, including the Ueki Art Tree Trimming Club of America.  The overall maintenance of the garden is supervised by Master Gardener Nobuyasu Koreeda. And the Zen Nippon Airinkai, a Japan-affiliated organization of koi enthusiasts, supports the continued beauty of the koi pond, a key focal point of the garden. 

 

  These individuals and organizations work closely with the curator of the garden, Dr. Vergil Hettick, a knowledgeable and articulate expert on diverse aspects of horticulture and gardens.  Cultural artists and performers like Mme. Sosei Matsumoto of the Urasenke Tea School and Kokoro Taiko group from Long Beach participate in special events and programs at the garden.

 

  Public programs at the Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden provide diverse opportunities to enjoy the garden, as well as to learn and participate in Japanese culture and horticulture programs. Coming up in the spring is the annual Horticulture Symposium on April 9 and the Spring Festival on May 7. 

 

  The Horticulture Symposium is composed of a series of separate workshops, focusing this year on koi and koi ponds, bonsai and orchids.  The workshops are $50 each or $40 for garden members. 

 

  The annual Spring Festival is a public event for the entire family, featuring aspects of Japanese culture, with cultural performances, displays of iris, fans and Japanese fabric curtains (noren), and fun hands-on activities for everyone.  Admission to the Spring Festival is $7 for adults, $6 for seniors and $5 for garden members. 

 

 “A visit to the garden is a rich experience in any season of the year,states Director Jeanette Schelin, “but experiencing the garden during one of our public programs or special events is an especially memorable occasion.”

 

  Many first-time visitors to the garden are invited guests to special events, like weddings, anniversary celebrations and retirement parties.  The completely out-door venue is host to more than 130 weddings a year.  Although constructed in a Japanese style, the garden is a welcoming neutral site which is conducive to weddings of diverse religions and cultures. 

 

   A bride and groom originally from India painstakingly created a mandab, or wedding canopy in the garden, and in accordance with tradition, the groom entered the garden astride a white horse. Lynette Roberts, Marketing Sales Coordinator recalls a 55- minute dual ceremony, reflecting both Jewish and Chinese traditions.

 

   The Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden has grown into its own over the last 25 years.  A garden in its full maturity, supported by meaningful and creative programs, it has much to offer.  Becoming a Friend of the Japanese Garden and joining as a member is an important way to support the continued programming of the garden and stay up to date on all garden happenings. 

 

  Garden members are invited to special members’ events and receive discounts on admission to public programs.  For more information on the Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden regarding membership, garden rental or program information, call (562) 985-2187 or look up the garden website at www.csulb.edu/~jgarden