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Sogetsu Ikebana
The Ikebana classes are held once or twice a month. The students are
guided step by step through the Sogetsu school program; each level is
supported by a printed curriculum, originally from Japan, which illustrates
the assignments in a progressive development, from the very simple to
more complex floral arrangements. After one book is studied and well understood,
the student obtains a Diploma, issued directly from the Sogetsu Headquarters
in Tokyo, signed by the head master. There are four books for amateurs.
After that student can continue to study for the teaching license recognized
by the same forum. Included in the price are the plant materials. These
are provided by the Institute. The tools are the student's responsibility;
we assist in getting them. It is greatly relaxing to be able to express
balance, harmony, beauty and tranquility using flowers, water and containers.
It is another expression of self-discovery in our Mind-Body journey.

Master Chinda and Reiko Nakajima, our Ikebana Instructor at
the Chinda Institute
History of Ikebana
Of all Japan's traditional arts, perhaps the most famed and actively
practiced today is IKEBANA, the art of flower arrangement. While tracing
its origins back for hundreds of years, it still exists as a vital element
in the contemporary world of art. It has emerged from its historical setting
within the "tokonoma" alcove of the Japanese house and entered the modern
everyday world: the office window or the conference room, the hotel lobby
or public square. In the same way, Ikebana is no longer the exclusive
province of arrangers or artists in Japan, but counts among its devotees
professional and amateur designers in all nations and walks of life.
With this added dimension to the use and meaning of Ikebana, the fundamentals
of structure, space and naturalism, which have been developed and perfected
over the centuries, have remained the same.
In basic form, an Ikebana arrangement follows a fixed pattern: a triangle
of three points representing Heaven, Earth and Man. Emphasis is placed
on linear perfection, color harmony, space and form. If commonplace branch
material is arranged in a beautifully flowing line, it takes preference
over a mass of blooms or blossoms, regardless of their beauty. Of equal
importance is the sense of naturalism: an arrangement encompasses nature
in all its aspects - from the tall stately pine to the lowliest blade
of grass. Further, an Ikebana usually contains the foliage and flowers
of the season at hand, used in their natural state except for the deft
"cut" of the arranger's clippers which perfects the line of a branch or
the shape of a bud.
There are numerous schools of Ikebana, each following a particular set
of rules and arranging techniques, but without losing sight of the fundamentals
of the art. And in keeping with the broader emphasis being given to Ikebana
in its role in contemporary living, many of the schools seek expression
in forms that reach beyond traditional styles.
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