GrimLore
Bonsai Nut alumnus... we miss you
Wasnt that my kid?
Sorce
Nah and if you did that yours kids would climb up the side of the building to get in! They certainly are climbers
GRIMMY
Wasnt that my kid?
Sorce
No! It was me! I recognize those chubby cheeks and that chain link. No wonder I'm scared of heights!Wasnt that my kid?
Sorce
Who said bonsai is natural? You're taking a tree or woody shrub, putting it into a restricted space with unnatural "soil," then stylizing it to represent a mature tree in nature. It's not supposed to look like what it really is. So I'd say the application of wire hardly invalidates bonsai as an art form. "Natural" has little to do with it.And wiring is more natural?
No argument from me, I just want to avoid the concept that you can take a tree and stick it in a pot and let it grow however it wants with maybe some trimming. You know, going for that really "natural" look. There are plenty of ugly trees in nature. And then there are some stunning trees in nature. As bonsai artists, we do a lot of guiding so the tree doesn't get any bad ideasYou're right Zach, if I may call you Zach, but your trees/bonsai should look like they are the result of natural encounters, elements and time. If the results look un-natural then your efforts have failed. There are a lot of techniques used commercially that are total failures because of a lack of artistic skill. If you do not recognize the naturalness of the efforts when applied properly the problem is the viewer's not the artist't. There are processes used in bonsai that for one reason or another cause the hackles to rise on the necks of some viewers.
Yes I remember Raymond J. Johnson. You do scratch the scab off of a recent Face Book debate where in one individual wanted to go to war over the quality of some really qusai-crumby little nursery trees in nursery containers claiming that they were bonsai simply because they were in pots. Hard to believe that there are still people out there that come from this point of view.No argument from me, I just want to avoid the concept that you can take a tree and stick it in a pot and let it grow however it wants with maybe some trimming. You know, going for that really "natural" look. There are plenty of ugly trees in nature. And then there are some stunning trees in nature. As bonsai artists, we do a lot of guiding so the tree doesn't get any bad ideas
You may call me Zach. That made me chuckle. Are you old enough to remember Raymond J Johnson Jr.?
For easy shipping to the ignorant West
And wiring is more natural?