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UT Knoxville ARCH 212 - Japan Edo Period
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ARCH 212 1nd Edition Lecture 12Outline of Last Lecture I. Sant’ Andrea al QuirinaleII. Francesco BorrominiIII.Saint Carlo Alle Quattro FontaneIV.Saint Ivo Della SapienzaV. Guarino GuariniVI. Capella SS. SindoneOutline of Current Lecture I. Zen BuddishmII. Daitoku-ji TempleIII. Ryoan-ji MonasteryIV. Garden of Saiho-ji TempleV. Tai-An TearoomVI.Shokin Tei TeahouseVII. Himeji CastleCurrent LectureI. Zen Buddishm- Apart of a Buddishm sect- Zen means meditation; can be expressed through drawing, writing, or mediating- Have gardens with interior spacesII. Daitoku-ji Temple- Man-made garden- Apart of Zen Buddishm architecture- A kare sansui* garden- Puts you in a mountain like environment- Hidden boundary wall- Looks unregulated but is very organized i. The sand is ranked everyday ii. take care of the gardenIII. Ryoan-ji Monastery- Located in KyotoThese notes represent a detailed interpretation of the professor’s lecture. GradeBuddy is best used as a supplement to your own notes, not as a substitute.- Apart of Zen Buddishm- Garden without plants- Sand and rocksi. Raked everydayii. Rocks have moss on the bottom - Composed idea of limitlessi. Purity and strong sense of the void- Interior: screens that open up or close off roomsIV. Garden of Saiho-ji Temple- Located at Kyoto- Dry cascade/ kare sansui- Large rocks/ dry waterfall- Man made that looks natural- Monks worked with river dock workers to move rocksV. Tai-An Tearoom- Located in Kyoto- Tokonama Alcove- only room for two people on mats- Sen No Rikyu- great Tea Master - Entrance is narrow and low i. So you have to bow down- Interior: unornamented except a flower, work of art, etc.i. Picked by the Tea Master to please the guest- Simplicityi. Paper on the wallii. Rice mats iii. Rustic charmVI.Shokin Tei Teahouse- Located at the Katsura Imperial Villa near Katsura, Kyoto- Apart of the Soan or Rustic Hermitagei. Sukiya style- rustic, timber wood with its bark- Influence of the Sen No Rikyu Tearoom- Stones for paths- Interior: tatami mats and shoji screensi. For changes in special hierarchy and flow- Buildings are arranged in a flying geese “V” formation i. Abstractedii. Shoin buildings have rectilinear formVII. Himeji Castle- Located at Hyogo Prefecture- Built for Hideyoshi (the Lord of Himeji), the Shogun lords, and warriors- Very complex gateways and walkways- Opposite design to the Zen Buddhist architecture- Hip gables* located at the rooftopsi. Makes the building look taller- only 5 stories tall*Key TermsKare Sansui- “dry landscape”; dried up mountain water; object of contemplationHip gables- straight and curved alternate to make the building look


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UT Knoxville ARCH 212 - Japan Edo Period

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