Thursday, November 18, 2010
Introductory Ikebana Classes at the Shambhala Center Fort Collins
IKEBANA Japanese Flower Arranging
Learn beginning techniques and design principals of Ikebana. Learn how to cultivate awareness and attention to balance, harmony, and space thru this creative art form.
Instructor: Sharon Stuart, Master Teacher Sogetsu School
Introductory Classes at the Shambhala Center Fort Collins
4 week Series
Tuesday evenings 6:30 -8:30
January 4, 11, 18, 25, 2011
$120.00 includes all materials - take flowers home
Register @ www.fortcollins.shambhala.org,
or call 970-221-0983
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Ikebana: The Art of Japanese Flower Arranging
In ancient times. Ikebana was controlled by priests of the major temples and practiced by royalty and samurai warriors to add spiritual balance to their lives. Monks offering flowers to the Buddha brought Ikebana, the art of flower arrangement, to Japan in the sixth century. Previously secret and unavailable to the populace, this art has been made available to people in all walks of life.
Today, Ikebana is one of the most well known of Japan's traditional arts. It is Zen-like--a hands-on practice creating a living sculpture. Ikebana has emerged from the traditional setting of the tokonoma, an alcove in a Japanese house, to include harmoniously designed arrangements that fit virtually any environment. This added dimension to the use and meaning of Ikebana has in no way altered those fundamentals of structure, space and naturalism, which have been developed and perfected over the centuries.
There are many schools of Ikebana, each with its own fundamentals. In basic form, an Ikebana arrangement follows a fixed pattern: an irregular triangle of three points representing Heaven, Man and Earth . Emphasis is placed on linear perfection, color, harmony, space and form.
Just as paintings are artistic expressions brushed on canvas, Ikebana is a three-dimensional artistic expression composed of flowers and plant materials. It is up to the aesthetic awareness of the Ikebana practitioner to assemble the materials, choose their most beautiful aspects, order them and endow them with a value transcending that which they had in nature.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Introductory to Ikebana Worksho[p
Monday, March 8, 2010
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Sharon Stuart..Ikebana Teacher Fort Collins..Sogetsu School
Tuesdays 1st & 3rd of the month Continuing Classes 2010
(Denver Sogetsu Spring Show) March 19 -21
April 6 & 20
May 4 & 18
June 1 & 15
(Denver Sogetsu Spring Show) March 19 -21
April 6 & 20
May 4 & 18
June 1 & 15
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)