Piscineidiot wrote:Rory, as far as I'm concerned, what's 'fashionable' is not a fixed point in time. Whether it's highly stylised or naturalistic, it doesn't matter. You at this point in time, feel like recreating a tree in miniature is the pinnacle. That is fair enough, but I feel to reduce more 'stylised' trees to a 'caricature' is a little unfair and diminishes the work of the old masters like Kimura and Nagato etc. They certainly could not be considered noobs with too little vision to see a tree for what it was. The fact is that their end goal was just different from what you are aspiring too. I'll be damned if there are wild JBP's out there with short, stout trunks and ridiculous amounts or ramification, or wild shimpaku juniper with quite the amount of swirling deadwood as they use and clouds of foliage. Their 'styles' weren't popular at fist either, and in fact, a more naturalistic style was popular at the time.
I commend you for striving towards your own style and expression of what the trees truly are, but never forget, what you see is what YOU see. There are reams of scientific and philosophical papers stating as much. I look forward to seeing and being inspired by the fruits of your labour, but will also continue to enjoy and be inspires by other, more stylised trees of equal quality.
That is a very well said post. It made me think a lot. That is definitely food for thought.
wrcmad wrote:Piscineidiot wrote:.... I feel to reduce more 'stylised' trees to a 'caricature' is a little unfair and diminishes the work of the old masters like Kimura and Nagato etc. They certainly could not be considered noobs with too little vision to see a tree for what it was.
I don't think using the term 'caricature' diminishes anyone's work. It is not used as a derogatory term, or with any negative connotations at all. It just is what it is.
Kimura, for example, is the one who first turned a tree on it's head.

Nothing natural about that.
I also note that Treeman used one of Kimura's more famous trees as an example of what is 'Unnatural' in the above post.
Yes, I certainly didn't mean the term 'caricature' in a derogatory term either. Like I have previously said, I do love trees that have clearly had a massive amount of high quality work applied of course, and just because it may not look natural to me, doesn't diminish my admiration for their skill at all.
kcpoole wrote:
Funny that when I collected mine, the branches were dead straight for about 3M with the occasional wisp of foliage. and a sprig or 2 of green at the end. It was jut one of 100s the same, so i am thinking that is how the naturalists would style it. if one was to create that in miniature then it would look really silly IMHO.
Similar thing with casuarina i reckon.
Ken
Yes, I do get that. There will always be 'scrawny' wild trees out there, and yes, some of them will of course look rather sick or perhaps they may have been severely attacked or diseased or just downright 'plain', and I'm sure it is up to the discretion of the owner of the tree, as to which form of 'wild' they choose to embody in their tree.
kcpoole wrote:
having said that, I am happy to be proved wrong when someone gets around to posting some examples rather than still just talking about how we are all doing it wrong.
Ken
Ken, I am very sorry if this thread has come across this way. If so, I am sincerely sorry. In no way do I mean for my opinion to be saying others are growing their trees 'wrong'. It is always about preference. Again, I apologize if it is perceived this way.

I am only trying to convey food for thought as to a type of bonsai tree that I aspire to. Whether it becomes mainstream or not, as objectors have pointed out doesn't make it right or wrong, but just a different approach.