Interesting thoughts Howard, thank you. I hope you don't mind if I comment on a few of them.
Howard Smith wrote:
Your argument is the corollary of telling a painter that since their medium is two dimensional that they should not use forshortening or any other techniques to give the painting any depth. The opposite is true with a bonsai. We must use a three dimensional medium to create a two dimensional image in our viewer's mind.
Why? Why are we not using a three dimensional medium to create a three dimensional image in our viewer's mind? Are we not short changing the art by reducing three dimensions to two?
Howard Smith wrote:
We are taking a small piece of plant material, and through technical tricks and artistry we are creating an 'image' of a tree that evokes feeling and provokes the recollection of the viewer's memories of scenes in nature. This image is diluted by trying to make many viewable fronts. We owe it to the viewer to pick the trunkline view that is most evocative of feeling.
My point in the article above is that no matter how carefully we "pick the trunk line view" we can not force the viewer to see it at this precise angle. The front we so carefully pick as the best may very well be only second best to the viewer. Why try to force a view, why force the viewer to see only one interpretation of the tree? Why not just show the bonsai and let the viewer see what they will?
The front as we know it exists only in our minds not the viewers. They see the tree at whatever angle they come upon it and at whatever height they are at. I am sure we have all had someone view one of our bonsai and remark on how beautiful it was only to have us rush over and turn the "front" toward them. For crying out loud, the tree was beautiful to them, is that not the point?
Howard Smith wrote:
We owe it to the viewer to arrange branches in an inviting fashion to bring the viewer into this symbol of a powerful living ingredient of nature (i.e. a tree). We owe it to the viewer to arrange the tertiary branches and the terminals of the branches to reach toward the front, so that they will again, be invited and drawn into our image of nature.
We owe it to the viewer to present a bonsai that they don't need to stand on a big red "X" in front of it in order to view it.
Howard Smith wrote:
The back branches must succumb to the artist's chosen front to most provokatively entice the viewer and summon their mental imagery of a tree. The pot must be chosen to best compliment the front image of the tree, not a secondary compromise choice to accomodate the viewer as he is coming and going, but a decisive choice which will look like the pot was created for the tree. The apex must slightly lean toward the front to provide that illusion of towering height, not be some monotonous dome.
These are "guidelines" followed in some cases, not followed in others, we could all point out a few dozen world class bonsai that b=sway from these guidelines...
Howard Smith wrote:
If bonsai enters the 'no front realm', we need get rid of all but round pots, since anything but a round pot would be distracting from nonfront views.
Now we are getting somewhere...this could be an article in itself.
What happens when your bonsai in a rectangular pot is viewed at at an angle? Does it suddenly become something other than a representation of a tree, does it turn into a beach ball or does it remain a tree?
Why are automobiles photographed mostly showing the corner of the box (the common shape of a car)?
Does the shape of the pot dictate subconsciously to the viewer where to view from? Does the shape move the viewer into the correct viewing position imagined by the artist?
Howard Smith wrote:
Bonsai shows would have to consist of isolated podiums so that no particular view is emphasized. Companion plants, a direct derivation of the Tokonome display will be obsolete.
Recently a bonsai show was held in an art gallery, imagine that. Guess what? They were displayed like sculpture where all sides could be viewed. Where does the two dimensional bonsai fit in here? I feel that venues like this will become more common as the art in bonsai comes of age.
Tokonoma display does not caress the single front either, as I showed in the article above.
Please remember, this article states that the front as we know it is a myth. Why is it a myth? Because it exists in the artists mind only, not the viewers. What you call the front, other artists may very well call the back or the side and the viewers could give a damn less, they just want to see the tree. We can point the tree anyway we want, it will however be viewed from all angles.
Will Heath