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Sunday, 28 June 2015
Daily Meditation: Ikebana Gallery Award
Post your work to be selected for the Ikebana Gallery Award 2015. http://bit.ly/1cHtQlR Entries close on 30 June 2015. いけ花ギャラリー賞締切り間近です。日本語案内:http://bit.ly/1HCrDHv
http://www.shoso.com.au
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Thursday, 25 June 2015
New Commission
Shoso Shimbo was selected to create a large artwork for the Archibald prize touring exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 2 Oct to 15 Nov, 2015. http://www.artgalleryofballarat.com.au
http://www.shoso.com.au
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Thursday, 4 June 2015
Ikebana Today 36
It is proposed that the original meaning of ikebana as well as Ikebana is to give a new life to a flower. Arranging flowers is like a ritual that gives new life to the dead cut flower. Ikebana may be comparable to a rite of passage.
In Japan, births, marriages, coming of age and funerals are all rites of passage that signify the death of old self and rebirth of a new self. It is important to realise that the cut flower as material for Ikebana and a flower as Ikebana work are completely different. Arranging flowers may be like conducting a funeral or a marriage. In any case, that is how I define Ikebana.
My course, Japanese Aesthetics: Ikebana to Contemporary Art at RMIT University will start again in July this year. Three Ikebana papers of mine were published this month, including “Ikebana in English: Bibliographical Essay” in the International Journal of Ikebana Studies, Vol.2. Please visit my site for the details.
http://www.shoso.com.au
https://www.facebook.com/ikebanaaustralia