Welcome to the blog with articles about bonsai. Here I add articles as I write them in several languages. I will add old ones as I stumble over them again. You are welcome to send me translations into other languages and I will publish them here. All text and images are copyrighted, however. Publication only with my agreement in writing.
Thursday, October 30, 2014
A personal view on the Fairy Tale Style
Over eigen gevormde en opgekweekte bonsai: A personal view on the Fairy Tale Style: This article depicts my personal view on the so-called Fairy Tale Style put forward by Walter Pall in his article http://walter-pall-bonsai...
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Purchase of my images
All images on my sites are strictly for personal viewing only. It is not by
accident that you cannot copy them with a mouse click to the right and
that you cannot link individual pictures. I want to have full control
over my property.
All images are for sale. Most are available in good and very good quality in large files for high resolution prints. The sizes are usually from 1,000 x 2,000 to 2,800 x 4,200 pixels. They are usually prepared for immediate publishing or printing.
I do not offer prints, only downloads are available. The prices per image depend on size, quality, and purpose. Exclusive use is only granted in rare instances. The small versions for net-publishing in size 800 x 800 pixels are usually from 3.- to 5.- US$ per piece. The largest versions around 2,000 x 4,000 are usually from 50.- to 200 US$ per piece. For large numbers discounts can be granted. Method of payment is paypal, credit cards cannot be accepted.
If you are interested in images I need exact information:
section: e.g. "3 Super Shots Broadleaved Trees 1"
image number: e.g. "2007-04-Dsc1059v" you find this number on lower left under the images.
size: what size do you need?
Then I need to know what you plan to do with the images. You will get an offer then.
Interested? Write a mail to bonsai@walter-pall.de
All images are for sale. Most are available in good and very good quality in large files for high resolution prints. The sizes are usually from 1,000 x 2,000 to 2,800 x 4,200 pixels. They are usually prepared for immediate publishing or printing.
I do not offer prints, only downloads are available. The prices per image depend on size, quality, and purpose. Exclusive use is only granted in rare instances. The small versions for net-publishing in size 800 x 800 pixels are usually from 3.- to 5.- US$ per piece. The largest versions around 2,000 x 4,000 are usually from 50.- to 200 US$ per piece. For large numbers discounts can be granted. Method of payment is paypal, credit cards cannot be accepted.
If you are interested in images I need exact information:
section: e.g. "3 Super Shots Broadleaved Trees 1"
image number: e.g. "2007-04-Dsc1059v" you find this number on lower left under the images.
size: what size do you need?
Then I need to know what you plan to do with the images. You will get an offer then.
Interested? Write a mail to bonsai@walter-pall.de
Sunday, June 22, 2014
Services
Demonstrations
I am willing to perform demonstrations in the standard way. I will work on all sorts of trees in all sorts of forms.
Please
check out Material for Bonsai Demonstrations to see what one should
offer. If in Europe, I can bring my own material. In North America I can
sometimes find the right material for you. I can work on very complex
trees in the standard two to four hours if I have one or two assistants.
I try to make a demonstration educational and entertaining at the same
time.
With assistant(s) it's even possible to work with several trees in parallel.
I
normally need all kinds of wire, preferably copper wire from 1 to 6 mm.
Power tools: a regular die grinder, like Makita, speed 20,000 to 25,000
turns per minute, preferably speed adjustable, opening for 1/4 inch or 6
mm bits; several bits for this grinder. Another Dremel like grinder
with 3mm opening and bits. A small torch which is used for jewelry or
glass work or also for the kitchen. Sometimes I need a large torch which
is used for regular household or craft. It should have a long flexible
shaft. This torch is available in any hardware store. In addition there
should be an assortment of normal bonsai tools available. A turn table
which really turns and which can be fixed is also a good idea.
Demonstration of new techniques
Lots
of folks are quite interested to learn about new and often drastic
techniques for bonsai styling. This can be exiting for the audience and
the teacher. It should be assured though, that the audience is really
advance and capable to grasp what is going on. An innocent audience will
think this is terrible, although it is really quite professional. Such
demonstrations are NOT a good idea for general club members and
certainly not for the broad public. I will NOT do this on big
conventions.
Extended Tree Inspiration (Tree Critique)
This is the starting segment of the International Bonsai Academy.
It is called 'tree critique', but I prefer the term 'Tree Inspiration' - it is more positive and tells what is really happening.
Instead of standard demonstrations or workshops I have developed another concept for a major lecture: People bring one or several trees to the public critique. The trees can be in all stages of development: outright raw material, intermediate and 'finished' bonsai. They can be in all variations of quality: very poor, normal, very good. I usually work on a stage in front of a seated audience.
Normally
I get from 10 to 30 trees for such a lecture. I then thoroughly analyze
every single tree and discuss it with the audience if there is
interest. Make sure that everybody understands that a tree critique is
about hearing the truth about a tree, as I see it. It is not so much
about what a student wants to do but what I would do personally if I had
to work on this tree. Such a session can last from two hours to four
hours. This can be extended to up to 50 trees for a full day. While I
will definitely say what I would do nobody is forced to follow me.
Everybody can make up their own mind about this and make their own
conclusions. I only try hard to stat people think more than they often
do.
I will mainly speak abut artistic concepts and stress point which go beyond the regular well known 'rules'. I will also speak in depth about horticultural aspects if necessary.
A Tree Inspiration is of value for the person who owns that tree, that's clear. It must be made understood that in addition it is of similar value to all others who are watching. Often others are more ready to accept change to a certain tree than the owner. It is like education your neighbors kids and having problems with your own.
I will mainly speak abut artistic concepts and stress point which go beyond the regular well known 'rules'. I will also speak in depth about horticultural aspects if necessary.
A Tree Inspiration is of value for the person who owns that tree, that's clear. It must be made understood that in addition it is of similar value to all others who are watching. Often others are more ready to accept change to a certain tree than the owner. It is like education your neighbors kids and having problems with your own.
The
advantages over a regular demo: very educational, very entertaining, no
cost to the club for demo trees, no killing of trees on stage, no
problems of providing the right kind of demo material, interesting for
all levels of experience, from outright novices to masters. Even people
who do not practice bonsai for themselves find these sessions very
educational and entertaining. It is like watching a cooking show on TV
without ever cooking.The advantages over a regular workshop: more
educational than a normal workshop, more participants possible, in fact,
the number is almost unlimited, participants with all levels of
experience find it interesting.
The advantage for clubs is that a real lot of people, like even 50 or more can be invited and asked to participate and pay a fee. Some clubs charge more for people who bring a tree. So many folks can watch an event which usually teaches more than a regular workshop and pay much less.
While an Extended Tree Inspiration can well be a stand-alone event it usually is followed by a workshop. Some or all participants who have watched the Tree Inspiration work on some or all of these trees afterwards. This could be in the afternoon of the same day or on following day. If I have one or two good assistants to help the advanced beginners or intermediate students I can handle from 12 up to 15 students per workshop. Again this can help to bring the cost per student down a lot.
Beginners can learn a real lot in the Tree Critique. I suggest that it would be better for beginners to listen to this rather than taking a workshop immediately. If there are many beginners in the following workshop the number can only be 6 to 8 folks.
It must be stressed that my way of running workshops is different form what is often done: I make it clear what options are on each tree but I try to never touch it. The students work and I watch them - not the other way around. I only help when really necessary and when asked, but I will not style somebodies tree in a workshop. It must be clear that I am trying not to be a bonsai fundamentalist. While it is made clear what I would do personally every student can do what they want to do in my workshops.
The advantage for clubs is that a real lot of people, like even 50 or more can be invited and asked to participate and pay a fee. Some clubs charge more for people who bring a tree. So many folks can watch an event which usually teaches more than a regular workshop and pay much less.
While an Extended Tree Inspiration can well be a stand-alone event it usually is followed by a workshop. Some or all participants who have watched the Tree Inspiration work on some or all of these trees afterwards. This could be in the afternoon of the same day or on following day. If I have one or two good assistants to help the advanced beginners or intermediate students I can handle from 12 up to 15 students per workshop. Again this can help to bring the cost per student down a lot.
Beginners can learn a real lot in the Tree Critique. I suggest that it would be better for beginners to listen to this rather than taking a workshop immediately. If there are many beginners in the following workshop the number can only be 6 to 8 folks.
It must be stressed that my way of running workshops is different form what is often done: I make it clear what options are on each tree but I try to never touch it. The students work and I watch them - not the other way around. I only help when really necessary and when asked, but I will not style somebodies tree in a workshop. It must be clear that I am trying not to be a bonsai fundamentalist. While it is made clear what I would do personally every student can do what they want to do in my workshops.
I
think this concept can dramatically change the mainstream
demonstrations and regular workshops. I have the strong feeling that
something must be done here. The public obviously does not accept the
old-fashioned way as it used to anymore.
One
idea is to have several masters doing a critique on the same trees on
stage. Like one hour master #1, one hour master #2 etc.. A very
interesting way of doing it is that the same tree is critiqued by master
#1 then master #2 adds to this. The next tree is started by master #2
and master #1 adds to it. etc..This could be quite interesting and
entertaining. People in all stages of expertise should want to see this.
We could get back the major part of the audience which we are loosing
with standard demonstrations.
If doing this for a whole day or even for two consecutive days it is advisable to include some additional presentation. It could be about 'Bonsai Styles', 'Development of Broadleaved Trees', Development of Conifers', 'Fairy Tale Bonsai Style', 'Bonsai Photography' and similar. l Usually I do not only speak about a specific tree only but add some subjects whenever appropriate. This could be bonsai philosophy, general design and art concepts applied to bonsai etc..
If doing this for a whole day or even for two consecutive days it is advisable to include some additional presentation. It could be about 'Bonsai Styles', 'Development of Broadleaved Trees', Development of Conifers', 'Fairy Tale Bonsai Style', 'Bonsai Photography' and similar. l Usually I do not only speak about a specific tree only but add some subjects whenever appropriate. This could be bonsai philosophy, general design and art concepts applied to bonsai etc..
BTW:
in case you are worried about the general tone of such a critique, I do
know about the cultural differences. A critique in Europe will be much
more direct than in America. An obvious amateurish tree will get
moderate critique to not hurt a beginner too much. But I call a spade a
spade in the end.
Tree critique (which I call Tree Inspiration)
This
is the normal procedure as handled in North America. It can be public
or private. I walk through an exhibit or a collection and speak about
all or most trees. I analyze the tree as I see it and give constructive
criticism. I say what I would do if it were my tree.
It
must be understood that to be of value a tree critique is not an
exercise in diplomacy. It is not about being nice to trees or people. it
is about analyzing trees and giving workable advice. Sometimes people
misunderstand this. It is more about what the artist thinks and not so
much about what the student thinks.
The
number of participants for a tree critique is almost unlimited. It can
be one person; it can be a dozen to twenty if in an exhibit area where
there is only so much room for the audience; it can be hundreds if the
critique is on stage in a big hall and the trees are delivered on stage.
If you worry about the tone, see above.
Workshops
I
offer regular workshops too. Every workshop begins with a thorough tree
critique of all trees. This is interesting not only to the owner of the
tree, but also to the other workshop participants and possibly a silent
observing public. It can take an hour or more. Then people should start
working on their tree themselves.
I
do not touch people's trees normally, I do not make the decision for
them, I give them several options, I do not style the tree for them. I
inspire people to do what they really can do for themselves. I want
people to walk away with the strong feeling that they have done it
themselves and they can do it again. If you want people to have a good
tree in the end which really the master has styled, then take another
artist. If you want people to really learn something in a workshop, you
can take me.
The maximum number of participants varies:
5 or 6 beginners. They must have a basic understanding of bonsai and they must have had some introductory courses.
8 intermediate.
10 advanced to very advanced.
The
material used is totally up to the organizers. I work with anything. It
is a good idea to provide material which is challenging for the level
of the participants. It is not a good idea to bring a tree which the
owner knows exactly what to do with. It is perfectly OK to bring several
trees to choose from. 'Impossible' trees are OK. Often they are
possible, sometimes not; bring an extra one for this case.
For more reading about material please check out: Garbage for Dinner at Bonsai Talk
Silent observers are welcome if the workshop participants agree.
Powerpoint (slide) presentations
I
need a regular PC with Windows an MS Power Point installed. It can be a
desk-top. If the audience is small, I can present right from the
monitor screen. If the audience is larger there should be a connection
between the PC and a large TV set or a projector.
Presentations available:
Development
of conifers: from the tree on the mountain to a 'masterpiece' in
several examples. Detailed explanation what to do and what not. See some
examples in the gallery of what to expect. From one hour to 90 minutes.
Development of non-conifers: similar to above.
Trees in nature and what we can learn from them. America: 45 to 90 minutes.
Trees in nature and what we can learn from them. Europe: 45 to 90 minutes.
Bonsai styling seminar, naturalistic style: 45 to 90 minutes.
Any other general subject that you agree with me well in advance. I will try to prepare a professional presentation.
Unfortunately I cannot do old-fashioned slide presentations with 32/24 mm slides anymore.
Moderation
I have developed the concept of moderating several artists who work in parallel on stage.
A
single standard demonstration often can be quite boring. Either the
artist is not a good entertainer although being a good artist. Or there
comes the time of endless carving or wiring and everybody falls asleep
or leaves the room.
When
several artists are working in parallel there is always something going
on which is of interest. A moderator makes sure that there is not a
boring moment, that all artists can speak when they have something to
say, that the public can ask questions or even participate in a
discussion if feasible, that everything runs smoothly. A moderator can
even be translator at the same time. We all were bored before by poor
translations on stage. It is very helpful if the moderator knows what he
speaks about.
A
good moderator makes sure that the work of the artist is shown in the
best light and that the audience gets the best possible show at the same
time.
This
concept can also make the sometimes outrageous costs of demonstrations
obsolete. It is a good idea to bring several new artists on stage in
parallel. They will be happy to do it for nothing. A good moderator
still makes a remarkable event out of this. It is quite possible to have
a big star and one or several much smaller stars on stage at the same
time. In Munich in spring of 2004 Kimura was on stage with several
second liners at the same time, moderated by myself.
Development of collections
I
am willing to work on trees of individuals and collections. These can
be raw material and also 'finished' trees. It can be an outright new
styling or an enhancement of an existing styling. I will also do
re-styling. The trees can be good to very good and even world class. I
will work on almost all species.
One-to-one workshops
This can be anything. The client decides what he/she wants me to do.
Podium discussion
In front of small to very large public I can discuss anything with the public or with several other competent participants.
Bonsai Academy
On a regular basis visits to your club to run a succession of coherent courses. These sessions could include all of the above.
The
aim is to get away from these one off workshops or lectures which don't
contribute all that much. Only successive lectures will make sure that
the students really progress.
Friday, June 20, 2014
about me
Here is how to
contact me:
e-mail:
bonsai@walter-pall.de
address: Walter Pall
Sonnenhgamer Str. 6
82544 Egling-Attenham
Germany
telephone:
from Germany :
08176-455
from the USA:
011-49-8176-455
from anywher else:
0049-8176-455
A well-meaning
person has written this about me:
Walter Pall was born
in 1944 in Austria, he is married to Hanna, with one son, living near
Munich, Germany, in sight of the Alps where he grew up and still
loves to ski. Since 1980 Walter has been busy with bonsai as a hobby.
After a career as top manager in the Electronics and Consulting
Industry he finally decided in 1990 to become a part time bonsai
professional.
Today Walter is one
of the most popular bonsai artists who has performed on most
international stages. He has visited the vast majority of European
countries and also South Africa, Australia, Canada and the United
States; he even appeared in Israel and in Argentina and Brazil.
His lectures are a
treat. Walter's philosophy about demos is first and foremost to
provide a basis of high quality bonsai work, add a substantial amount
of explanation for the audience to clearly understand his development
process, and also tell amusing anecdotes along the way. Altogether
this makes for an entertaining and professional show. Nobody falls
asleep in Walter's lectures. Walter often is called a walking
encyclopedia on bonsai and he shares his knowledge freely. Walter
also loves to lead workshops where he sets the main focus on teaching
the artistic side of bonsai. In the past years Walter has also
established himself as the key moderator for international bonsai
conventions. A specialty of Walter are his tree critiques which eh
calls 'tree inspiration'. He analyses anything from stick in a yogurt
cup to world class bonsai. Walter gives clear indications of pros and
cons and describes ways to continue working with the trees.
He is known
worldwide for the quality of his bonsai creations. Walter has
received several dozens national and international awards for his
beautiful, dramatic bonsai. He has won the most prestigious Crespi
Cup Award of Italy for his well known Rocky Mountain Juniper, and has
come in among the top six, every time he has entered. He has also won
second and third and other places places in the Gingko Cup Awards of
the Belgium bonsai competition held every two years.
Walter was one of
the first Europeans to work with indigenous species, which he
collects in his beloved Alpine mountains He now owns a collection of
about 1000 quality trees in varying stages of development and keeps a
store reserve of about 1000 handmade pots to compliment the bonsai.
Besides his famous conifers he is also well known for his beautiful
deciduous trees. Walter's bonsai usually are strong, powerful trees
which he frequently forms in natural shapes. The longer he has been
involved with tree development, the more he has moved away from
traditional bonsai styling to his own concepts of design. Only those
who have actually visited his garden know that he also has an
impressive collection of shohin bonsai.
It will surprise
many that Walter considers himself an amateur, and he means it. While
he apparently tries hard to work professionally with whatever he
does, the aim is not commercial success. He does not style trees to
sell them later. He does it for his own joy. This is the reason why
he entertains one of the most comprehensive bonsai collections
around.
For many years
Walter has been writing a lengthy and comprehensive encyclopedia on
bonsai. Hopefully some day this will be published. He has also
written more than 100 articles that have been published in Western
bonsai magazines. Walter is a very good photographer and is able to
provide many high quality pictures to illustrate his articles. He is
also a very active, vocal participant on the internet in the bonsai
scene.
Friday, February 7, 2014
Der Märchenstil - German
Der Märchenstil
von Walter Pall
übersetzt von Gerog Maurer
Als im Sommer 2013 die internationale Bonsai Akademie bei Sebastijan Sandev stattfand, bemerkten Sebastijan und ich, dass unsere Ideen über die Gestaltung einiger Bäume so weit vom Standard-Bonsai entfernt waren, dass wir es besser als etwas anderes benennen.
Wie das alles entstanden ist:
"Sarah und John verließen am Nachmittag ihr Zuhause, weil ihre Mutter ihnen gesagt hatte, sie könne sie nicht mehr versorgen und würde sie deshalb an reiche Bauern verkaufen, welche sie wie Sklaven halten würden. Also liefen die Kinder Hand in Hand in Richtung des Waldes. Sie liefen tiefer und tiefer in den Wald hinein und wurden ziemlich verängstigt. Es wurde dunkel und der Wald machte es sogar noch dunkler. Die Kinder fühlten sich schutzlos gegenüber all den wilden Tieren und Geistern und den Bösen. Sie wurden sehr müde und schließlich sahen sie in der Ferne einen riesigen Baum. Sie waren eingeschüchtert von der Größe, dem gewaltigen Stamm und den Ästen die so dick waren wie andere Bäume und sich in alle Richtungen bewegten wie ein Oktopus. Sie trauten sich fast nicht näher ranzugehen. Da sie keine Wahl hatten, kamen sie endlich an dem Baum an, welcher sogar noch gewaltiger war, als er zuvor wirkte. Sie krochen über die enormen Wurzeln und fanden einen Spalt im Stamm, der groß genug war, um sie beide zu beherbergen. Dort fühlten sie sich sicher und schliefen ein. Dann, um Mitternacht, wachten sie auf, weil der Baum in einer tiefen, sanften Stimme zu ihnen sprach und sie bat rauszukriechen. Er wollte ihnen den Wald zeigen und sie all den Tieren und den anderen Bäumen vorstellen. Daraufhin wussten Sarah und John, dass sie an einem sicheren Ort sind und liebten den Baum. Von diesem Moment an bedeuteten Bäume etwas ganz besonderes für sie."
Als im Sommer 2013 die internationale Bonsai Akademie bei Sebastijan Sandev stattfand, bemerkten Sebastijan und ich, dass unsere Ideen über die Gestaltung einiger Bäume so weit vom Standard-Bonsai entfernt waren, dass wir es besser als etwas anderes benennen.
Wie das alles entstanden ist:
"Sarah und John verließen am Nachmittag ihr Zuhause, weil ihre Mutter ihnen gesagt hatte, sie könne sie nicht mehr versorgen und würde sie deshalb an reiche Bauern verkaufen, welche sie wie Sklaven halten würden. Also liefen die Kinder Hand in Hand in Richtung des Waldes. Sie liefen tiefer und tiefer in den Wald hinein und wurden ziemlich verängstigt. Es wurde dunkel und der Wald machte es sogar noch dunkler. Die Kinder fühlten sich schutzlos gegenüber all den wilden Tieren und Geistern und den Bösen. Sie wurden sehr müde und schließlich sahen sie in der Ferne einen riesigen Baum. Sie waren eingeschüchtert von der Größe, dem gewaltigen Stamm und den Ästen die so dick waren wie andere Bäume und sich in alle Richtungen bewegten wie ein Oktopus. Sie trauten sich fast nicht näher ranzugehen. Da sie keine Wahl hatten, kamen sie endlich an dem Baum an, welcher sogar noch gewaltiger war, als er zuvor wirkte. Sie krochen über die enormen Wurzeln und fanden einen Spalt im Stamm, der groß genug war, um sie beide zu beherbergen. Dort fühlten sie sich sicher und schliefen ein. Dann, um Mitternacht, wachten sie auf, weil der Baum in einer tiefen, sanften Stimme zu ihnen sprach und sie bat rauszukriechen. Er wollte ihnen den Wald zeigen und sie all den Tieren und den anderen Bäumen vorstellen. Daraufhin wussten Sarah und John, dass sie an einem sicheren Ort sind und liebten den Baum. Von diesem Moment an bedeuteten Bäume etwas ganz besonderes für sie."
Das ist der Baum, den wir zu erschaffen versuchen. Er hat nicht viel
damit zu tun, was Bonsai normalerweise ist, außer, dass er sich in
Behältern, meistens nicht einmal in Schalen, befindet. Er ist gewaltig,
gespenstisch, grotesk und erscheint monströs, obwohl er gleichzeitig
sehr warm und freundlich ist, ein Baum so hässlich, dass er wieder schön
ist. Er weiß nicht, dass er hässlich ist und es ist ihm auch egal. Viel
wichtiger ist Freundschaft und Zuflucht. Es ist ein großzügiger Baum
mit einem sehr weichen Kern in einer sehr harten Schale.
Wie macht man sich nun daran, einen Baum im Märchenstil zu
gestalten? Am allerwichtigsten ist das Material. Im Allgemeinen macht es
keinen Sinn, jede Form und jeden Stil den man sich gerade zur
Gestaltung vorgenommen hat jedem beliebigen Material aufzuzwingen. Der
Baum wird einem erzählen was er werden will. Was man als Bonsai-Material
bekommt ist allgemein nicht geeignet für diese Art von Stil, es ist
eher geeignet um einen Standard-Bonsai zu gestalten. Aber das
"unmögliche" Material, der monströse, gesammelte Baum der so viele
Optionen hat, aber keine wirklich gute, der letzte Hund, sie alle können
gutes Material für den Märchenstil sein. Der große Vorteil dieses Stils
ist, dass ansonsten wertloses Material für besondere Resultate genutzt
werden kann. Das ist aber nicht der wahre Grund um in diesem Stil zu
arbeiten. Einige werde das jedoch behaupten, aber wir sollten sie
ignorieren. Sie würden es sowieso nicht verstehen. Es muss etwas in
diesem chaotischen Baum sein das man sieht, was Sinn ergibt. Jedoch Sinn
auf eine Märchenstil-Weise und nicht auf eine Bonsai-Weise. Es kann ein
monströses Nebari sein, oder sehr merkwürdig wachsende Äste, oder große
Wunden die unheimliche Höhlen sein könnten.
Hier einige Bonsai im Märchenstil:
Was ist der Unterschied zwischen dem Märchenstil und dem
Naturalistischen Stil? Betrachten wir zuerst, was sie gemeinsam haben.
Beide sind sehr kontrovers. Das ist immer gegeben, sobald etwas das
Bonsai-Establishment bedroht. Beide bestehen bereits seit einer langen
Zeit, wenn auch ziemlich unbemerkt. Die Chinesen betreiben den
Naturalistischen Stil und den Märchenstil schon seit einer langen Zeit.
Beide scheinen einfach zu sein, sind aber schwieriger zu meistern als
der sogenannte klassische Bonsai im Neoklassischen Bonsai Stil. Beide
streben danach, einen Baum zu erschaffen und unter keinen Umständen
einen typischen Bonsai. Beide wollen dem Baum eine Seele geben, damit er
sprechen kann. Jetzt die Unterschiede. Während im Naturalistischen Stil
jemand normalerweise versucht etwas Schönes zu erschaffen, ist das
nicht das Ziel beim Märchenstil. Dort versucht man etwas
eindrucksvolles, einzigartiges und dominantes auf eine freundliche Art
zu gestalten.
Dies befindet sich alles noch in den Kinderschuhen und es wird noch
viel mehr Beispiele geben. Dies soll nur die Diskussion ins Rollen
bringen.
Hier noch weitere Bilder von Bäumen in der Nature, die als Vorbilder dienen könnten.
Sunday, February 2, 2014
The Fairy Tale Bonsai Style
The
Fairy Tale Bonsai Style (FTS)
by
Walter Pall
www.walter-pall.de
When
the International Bonsai Academy was at Sebastijan Sandev's place in
summer of 2o13 Sebastijan and I noticed that our ideas about styling
some trees were so far away from standard bonsai that we better call
it something else.
This
is how this all came abut:
"And
Sarah and John left their home in the afternoon because their mother
had told them that she could not feed them anymore and would sell
them to the rich farmers who would keep them like slaves. So the
children walked away into the woods holding their hands. They went
deeper and deeper into the forest and became quite afraid. It was
getting dark and the forest made it even darker. The children felt
without protection against all the wild animals and the ghosts and
the evil ones. They became very tired and finally saw this enormous
tree from far away. They were scared of the size, the mighty trunk
and the branches which were so thick like other trees and moved into
all directions like an octopus. They almost did not dare to get
closer. But since they had no choice they finally arrived at the
tree, which was even mightier than it had looked before. And they
crawled over the enormous roots and found this crevice in the trunk
which was large enough for both of them to enter. There they felt
safe and fell asleep. Then at midnight they woke up because the tree
spoke in a deep, gentle voice to them and asked them to crawl out. He
wanted to show them the forest and introduce them to all the animals
and to the other trees. And Sarah and Joe knew they were in a save
place and loved the tree. From then on trees meant something very
special to them."
This
is the trees that we try to create. It has not much to do with what
bonsai normally is other than that it is in a container, often not
even in a pot. It is mighty, spooky, grotesque, appearing monstrous
but being very warm and friendly, a tree that it so ugly that it is
beautiful again. He does not know that he is ugly, and he does not
care. Much more important is friendship and shelter for many. It is a
giving tree, a very soft core in a very hard shell.
How
does one go about creating tree in the FTS? First the material is
most important. It does not make sense in general to force whatever
form and style one is determined to create onto any piece of
material. The tree will tell you what it wants to become. What one
gets as bonsai material in general is not suitable for this kind of
style, it usually is suitable to become a standard bonsai. But the
'impossible' material, the monstrous collected tree which has so many
options but not a single 'good' one, the last dog, they can well be
good material for the FTS. One of the great advantages of this style
actually is that otherwise worthless material can be used for great
results. But this is not the real reason to work in this style. Some
will spread the word though that it is and we should ignore them.
They won't get it, anyway. There must be something in this chaotic
tree that you see which makes some sense. But sense in a fairy tale
way and not in a bonsai way. It can be a monstrous nebari, or very
strangely growing branches, or huge wounds which could be spooky
hollows.
Here some bonsai in the
FTS:
What's
the difference between the FTS and the naturalistic Style? First
let's see what they have in common. Both are controversial. This is a
given if something threatens the bonsai establishment. Both are here
since a long time already, but hardly noticed. The Chinese have done
naturalistic and fairy tale trees since a very long time. Both seem
to be easy, but are more difficult to do well than a so called
classical bonsai in the neoclassical bonsai style. Both are striving
to create a tree and absolutely not a typical bonsai. Both want to
give the tree a soul so that it can speak.
Now
the differences. While in the naturalistic style one usually tries to
create something beautiful this is not the object in the FTS. There
one tries to create something, impressive, unique, dominating in a
nice way.
This
all is in the very beginning and there will be many more examples.
This is only to start the discussions.
Here
some more images of trees in nature that could be the model for us:
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