Ikenobo Sen'o remarked on another occasion (this too is in his Sayings) that "the mountains and strands should appear in their own forms". Bringing a new spirit into his school of flower arranging, therefore, he found "flowers" in broken vessels and withered branches, and in them too the enlightenment that comes from flowers. "The ancients arranged flowers and pursued enlightenment." Here we see awakening to the heart of the Japanese spirit, under the influence of Zen. And in it too, perhaps, is the heart of a man living in the devastation of long civil wars.


Japan, the Beautiful and Myself (1969)


Ikenobo Sen'o remarked on another occasion (this too is in his Sayings) that the mountains and strands should appear in their own forms. Bringing a...

Ikenobo Sen'o remarked on another occasion (this too is in his Sayings) that the mountains and strands should appear in their own forms. Bringing a...

Ikenobo Sen'o remarked on another occasion (this too is in his Sayings) that the mountains and strands should appear in their own forms. Bringing a...

Ikenobo Sen'o remarked on another occasion (this too is in his Sayings) that the mountains and strands should appear in their own forms. Bringing a...