| Japanese garden to be dedicated
Design and installation part of General Education
class by Daniel
J. Fitzgibbons, Chronicle staff
| |
| Reviewing drawings of the new Japanese
garden at Durfee Conservatory are (clockwise from bottom left)
sophomore Alexandra Weltman, Music professor John Jenkins,
Paula Induni, graduate student and teacher of "The Lively
Arts," and John Tristan, director of Durfee. (Stan Sherer
photo) |
Japanese garden developed by undergraduates in
"The Lively Arts" General Education course will be dedicated
this weekend at Durfee Conservatory.
Chancellor John V.
Lombardi will formally open the new Arts in Small Spaces Japanese
garden, a four-semester project that engaged 920 undergraduates
in studying the aesthetics of Japanese garden design and working
with Conway artist Thomas Matsuda and Durfee Conservatory director
John Tristan to create and install the garden.
Arts in Small Spaces
is a student-centered celebration of the work of William S. Clark
and the 125th anniversary of academic partnership with Hokkaido
University. The project's name reflects the widespread Japanese
custom of creating gardens in the limited spaces available in homes,
apartments and shops.
John and Miriam Jenkins
of the Department of Music and Dance developed the idea for the
project during his appointment in 2000-01 as visiting foreign professor
at Hokkaido University, where he assisted with implementation of
a new general education curriculum.
The project, according
to Jenkins, was inspired by Tristan's work in the conservatory with
School of Nursing faculty on horticultural therapy, and Matsuda's
installation piece "Searching for Buddha in the Mountains"
in the Tippo Courtyard of the Du Bois Library. Jenkins, Tristan
and Matsuda planned the Arts in Small Spaces project as a means
of involving all of the students in "The Lively Arts"
in learning more about the people and culture of Japan - a part
of the world unfamiliar to most of them.
Student participation
is Japanese garden design at Durfee has historical precedent, according
to Tristan. In "A History of the Durfee Conservatory,"
Tristan reports that in 1872-73 Japanese exchange students Geamon
Youchi, Saitaro Naito and Tenataro Yamao used plants of their native
land to create the first garden outside the plant house.
During the dedication
ceremony on April 13 at 2:30 p.m., Masuo Nishibayasi, Japan's consul
general in Boston, will honor the opportunities provided for today's
students by the University's historic academic partnership with
Hokkaido University.
"We believe that
we have a good thing going, and plan to continue our cross-campus
collaboration," said Jenkins. "Already the Arts in Small
Spaces Japanese garden has become a popular feature for the many
visitors to Durfee Conservatory. Plans to extend the project's duration
have evolved from the tremendous interest and enthusiasm of the
students, staff and faculty involved."
Arts in Small
Spaces is sponsored by the Fine Arts Center, Department of Music
and Dance, and the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences with assistance
from personnel from Physical Plant's Landscape Services unit. |