07 April 2019

TARkado | Théâtre d' Antho-Rangement | Middle Way Flowers


     FRENCH 
     
rangement

   
 ENGLISH 
     
arrangement
     noun   
     arrangement, classification

Ikebana (生け花, 活け花, "arranging flowers" or "making flowers alive") is the Japanese art of flower arrangement. It is also known as Kadō (華道, "way of flowers").

Kadō is counted as one of the three classical Japanese arts of refinement, along with kōdō for incense appreciation and chadō for tea and the tea ceremony.

Artists of the Kanō school such as Sesshū Tōyō (1420–1506), Sesson, Kanō Masanobu, Kanō Motonobu (1476–1559), and Shugetsu of the 16th century were lovers of nature, so that ikebana advanced in this period a step further than temple and room decoration and commenced in a rudimentary way to consider natural beauty in floral arrangement. At this time ikebana was known as rikka.

This same age conceived another form called nageirebana. Rikka and nageirebana are the two branches into which ikebana has been divided. Popularity of the two styles vacillated between these two for centuries. In the beginning, rikka was stiff, formal, and more decorative while nageirebana was simpler and more natural...

- Wikepedia

TARkado is a more recent development, a confluence of Kadō and Theatre of the Actors of Regard. Nature ranged in the painted world. It originates from country Victoria.



TARkado  
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