Sunday

Bonsai – Todd Renshaw



Michigan Oriental Art Society

Sunday, September 8, 2013
St John Hospital-Oakland Education Center, 27351 Dequindre Rd, Madison Heights (between 11 Mile and 12 Mile Rds)
Social Time at 1:30 pm, Meeting at 2:00 pm

Bonsai – Todd Renshaw




In Japanese, the word bonsai (pronounced bone-sigh) simply means "tree in a pot." But in practice, bonsai can be both more complicated and more rewarding than its simple name implies. For many people, their first exposure to bonsai is the ones for sale in stores like Home Depot and Target. These mass-produced bonsai are usually poor examples of the true art form.

The greatest myth about bonsai is that they are a specific kind of tree that grows in twisted and dwarfed shapes all on its own, but the distinctive bonsai "look" is the result of many years of work. Bonsai is an art that requires unique horticultural techniques, (pruning, pinching of foliage, and wiring to shape branches), and an eye for "design;" (movement, balance, proportion). Bonsai are created to look like simplified/stylized versions of naturally growing, much larger trees in their various forms and environments.

Most of the techniques in use today are the result of generations of Chinese and Japanese refinement. The modern art form of bonsai began in China during the third century BC. Naturally dwarfed and twisted trees were collected from mountain tops and transplanted to pots for display. Gradually, techniques evolved to create and maintain the same effect on other types of trees. These first bonsai were sometimes shaped into abstract forms mimicking animals or Chinese written characters. During the cultural exchange between China and Japan of the twelfth century, the art came to the Japanese. It is in Japan that bonsai was refined to its current art form. Bonsai styled in the Japanese tradition are beautifully shaped, but must also look like naturally growing tree forms. Although Americans think of bonsai as a strictly Japanese endeavor, China, Japan and other parts of the world have all influenced each other and the current state of this evolving art.

Todd Renshaw will talk about all these issues and much more during his presentation. Todd is a past-president of Four Seasons Bonsai Club of Michigan, a Detroit-area organization dedicated to teaching bonsai.