As
you approach Tofuku-ji temple, the Tsuten-kyō
bridge is the first structure you see (image above left). Walking on it
reminded me one of those forest canopy walks, except that the walkway is done
in medieval Japanese style (images above).
Tofuku-ji
is the main temple of the Rinzai sect and it has some impressive buildings. On
entering the gate (image below center) you see the Main Hall or Hon-dō (image below left). It’s quite
imposing, but elegant too.
Another
imposing structure is Tōfuku-ji's main gate, the oldest of its kind in Japan
(images below). There is a very old juniper between the Main Hall and the main
gate (image below right). I wish I could read the explanation plate about this
tree, unfortunately it was only in Japanese (for a story about junipers at
Kencho-ji temple in Kamakura see my blog entry at http://lomov.blogspot.com.au/2010/04/when-i-visited-kencho-ji-temple-in.html).
Other
buildings I saw included priests’ living quarters or Kuri (image below right) and the Abbot’s Hall or Hōjō (image below left).
The
original Hōjō building dates back to
the 13th century, while its current version was built in 1890. However, the
main attraction here is not the old building, but its four gardens designed by
a scholar and garden designer Shigemori Mirei in 1939. At that time these
gardens were perceived as a radical deviation from the tradition. The Southern
Garden (images below) is the largest of the four. Its rocks symbolise four mythical
islands, where each island is suggested by a group of rocks. The white sand
represents “eight rough seas”, while mossy knolls at the far end of the garden
signify “five sacred mountains”.
In
the Eastern Garden Shigemori Mirei arranged seven old building foundation stones
in the shape of the Great Bear constellation (images below).
The
Northern Garden is just a moss field with square stones arranged like a
gradually disintegrating checkerboard (images below). To me, this gradient from
regular to random is another way of saying “nothing is perfect”. The
checkerboard pattern is unusual for Japanese gardens, but I’ve seen it in the interior
decoration of traditional houses (see rightmost image below).
The
checkerboard theme continues in the Western Garden (images below). Although
this garden is Japanese in its essence, it shares many similarities with the
French Formal Garden. Here, trimmed azaleas, moss turf and decorative gravel
can be viewed as a variation of parterre
de gazon of the French garden.
After
that, I went to see the garden of Kaizan-dō
Hall. This garden is divided by a central path (leftmost image below). The two
sides of the garden created by this path stand in sharp contrast to each-other.
One side is a field of white sand raked in a checkerboard pattern (panel
below, third image from the left). This part of the garden is framed by the building.
The only irregularity in the perfect geometric order of this side is a single mossy
island with a beautiful tree growing among the rocks (rightmost image below).
The
other side of the garden is a very textural juxtaposition of moss, button-shaped
azaleas, water and rocks (see images below). It has a beautiful backdrop of
tall trees (panel above, second image from the left).
The
temple’s grounds also have lots of parkland some of which is quite scenic (see
images below).
My
visit to Tofuku-ji offered me more than I expected. The only regret is that I
missed out on seeing dry gardens of Reiun-in
and Ryoginan-tōtei buildings. I guess
it’s an incentive to visit this temple again.
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