Thursday, April 17, 2008

Kew at the British Museum



JapanGarden are pleased to be supplying Bamboo Poles for the Wisteria Gazebo in this exciting event.



Discover the natural wonders of China at the British Museum.

China Landscape is a unique partnership between the British Museum and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and celebrates a shared vision to strengthen cultural understanding and support biodiversity conservation across the world.

Located in the British Museum’s forecourt, the landscape features elements of a traditional Chinese scholar’s garden and explores the medicinal benefits, economic properties, artistic influences and cultural traditions of plants and shrubs from south-west China

Links:
British Museum
Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew

Monday, April 14, 2008

Bincho Yakatori

JapanGarden are pleased to be helping David Miney of Bincho Yakitori, a great Japanese restaurant on the 2nd Floor of the Oxo Tower in London with their new Bincho in Soho. Japangarden supplied the interior hanging lighting in the restaurant, (they are our traditional Japanese lanterns seen below in their web images)

If you have a chance - eat there!




Bincho Yakitori link here

Thursday, April 10, 2008

William Corey, a Boulder-based large-format photographer who produced hundreds of pictures of Japanese gardens, died Monday at the age of 58.




William Corey, a Boulder-based large-format photographer who produced hundreds of pictures of Japanese gardens, died Monday at the age of 58.



"A good photograph requires as much planning as a crime."

Those are the words William Corey chose to describe the ideal approach to composing and taking photographs.

It was also the method the Boulder-based photographer painstakingly followed in producing some of the finest large-format prints of Japanese gardens the world has seen.

"I don't think you have to stand in front of his art for more than a minute or two before you get a sense of his perception that everything is a miracle," said Ron Billingsley, a former University of Colorado professor of American literature and a longtime friend. "He had a rapt attention to detail."

Corey died Monday after a long battle with cancer. He was 58.

Left behind is a stunning collection of photographs he shot during more than 30 years of visits to Japan.

Corey became so adept at capturing the delicate interplay of color and light in the finely sculpted gardens that he was the only western photographer invited to photograph the gardens of the Japanese emperor.

His craft was also his bread and butter. He amassed a list of illustrious clients -- Bear Stearns, Dean Witter, Citicorp, Merrill Lynch, J.P. Morgan Bank -- along with Denver-based Listen Up and the Pamela R. Lessing Friedman Foundation of Boulder.

Friends who bought his prints were transfixed by them.

"His photographs are like exquisite time machines," said Valerie Appelbaum, a 25-year friend. "When I look at one, I'm transported to another time and place."

Another time and place is exactly what Corey wanted to capture when, in 1974, he saw a television show about Japanese gardens.

He flew to Japan and quickly discovered that his 35mm camera wasn't going to do the job.

He opted for a vintage, accordion-style Korona Panoramic View camera -- built from brass, leather and wood. The bulky camera was equipped with a Kodak 18-inch wide-field copy lens and shot onto 8-by-20-inch film.

Taking days to familiarize himself with every shadow and angle of a garden and using a single exposure that might last for 30 minutes or more, Corey used patience and a Zen-like focus to get his image.

"The last thing that goes through my mind before I trip the shutter? 'Could another photographer be standing in this same place, making this same picture.' Yes, means I haven't worked hard enough."

This is an extract from an article appearing in Daily Camera.com - the link to the full article is here:
Contact Camera Staff Writer John Aguilar at 303-473-1389 or aguilarj@dailycamera.com.