Katsura Imperial Villa

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The Katsura Imperial Villa

The Katsura Imperial Villa (桂離宮 Katsura Rikyū?), or Katsura Detached Palace, is a villa with associated gardens and outbuildings in the western suburbs of Kyoto, Japan (in Nishikyō-ku, separate from the Kyoto Imperial Palace). It is one of Japan's most important large-scale cultural treasures.

Its gardens are a masterpiece of Japanese gardening, and the buildings are even more important, one of the greatest achievements of Japanese architecture. The palace includes a shoin ("drawing room"), tea houses, and a strolling garden. It provides an invaluable window into the villas of princes of the Edo period.

The palace formerly belonged to the princes of the Hachijō-no-miya (八条宮) family. The Imperial Household Agency administers it, and accepts visitors by appointment.

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[edit] History

The Katsura district of Kyoto has long been favored for villas, and in the Heian period, Fujiwara no Michinaga had a villa there. The members of the Heian court found it an elegant location for viewing the moon.

Prince Hachijō Toshihito (智仁; 1579–1629), the first of the Hachijō-no-miya line, established the villa at Katsura. The prince was a descendant of Emperor Ogimachi, and younger brother of Emperor Go-Yozei. Once adopted by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, he cancelled the adoption when Hideyoshi had a son, and founded the Hachijō-no-miya house.

The shoin of Katsura Imperial Villa is divided into three parts: the Old Shoin, the Middle Shoin, and the New Palace. The Old Shoin was built in around 1616.[1] The construction of the shoin, teahouse and garden continued in the time of the second prince, Toshitada (智忠; 1619–1662), and reached completion after some decades.

The Hachijō-no-miya house changed its name to Tokiwai-no-miya (常磐井宮), Kyōgoku-no-miya (京極宮), and finally Katsura-no-miya (桂宮), before the line died out in 1881. The Imperial Household Ministry took control of the Katsura Detached Palace in 1883, and since World War II, the Imperial Household Agency has been in control.

[edit] Buildings and gardens

Katsura Imperial Villa in spring

The Old Shoin, Middle Shoin and New Palace are each in the shoin style, with irimoya kokerabuki (柿葺) roofs. The Old Shoin shows elements of the sukiya style in places like the veranda. A space called the moon-viewing platform protrudes even farther from the veranda, and shows that the main theme of Katsura Detached Palace was moon-viewing. The walls of the Middle Shoin and New Palace have ink-paintings by the school of Kanō Tan'yū (狩野 探幽). The shelving in the upper room of the New Palace is considered especially noteworthy.

The strolling garden takes water from the Katsura River for the central pond, around which are the Shōkintei (松琴亭), Shōkatei (賞花亭), Shōiken (笑意軒), and Gepparō (月波楼); tea houses, hill, sand, bridge, and lanterns. There is also a Buddhist hall, Onrindō (園林堂).

[edit] Influence outside Japan

The buildings, and to a lesser extent the gardens, of Katsura became influential to a number of well known modernist architects in the 20th century via a book produced by Bruno Taut. Le Corbusier and especially Walter Gropius, who visited in 1953, found inspiration in the minimal and orthogonal design.[2] Subsequently, Katsura become well known to a second wave of architects from Australia such as Philip Cox, Peter Muller and Neville Gruzman who visited in the late 1950s and 1960s.[3][4]

[edit] Gallery

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Moffett, Marian; Fazio, Michael W.; Wodehouse, Lawrence (2003). A world history of architecture. Laurence King Publishing. p. 107. ISBN 9781856693714. http://books.google.com/?id=IFMohetegAcC&pg=PT102#v=onepage&q&f=false 
  2. ^ "Katsura | Electa Architecture | Phaidon Store". Phaidon.com. http://www.phaidon.com/store/electa-architecture/katsura-9781904313595/. Retrieved 2011-03-27. 
  3. ^ Lacey, Stephen. "House & Home - Life & Style Home". Melbourne: theage.com.au. http://www.theage.com.au/news/house--home/beauty-and-the-east/2006/10/10/1160246107376.html?page=fullpage. Retrieved 2011-03-27. 
  4. ^ Goad, Philip; Bingham-Hall, Patrick (2003). Architecture Bali: birth of the tropical boutique resort. Tuttle Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 9780794601980. http://books.google.com/?id=NR5WF1cKrbkC&pg=PT24&lpg=PT24&dq=Peter+Muller+Katsura#v=onepage&q=Peter%20Muller%20Katsura&f=false 

[edit] Further reading

There are numerous works on Katsura; the following are the main ones recommended as sources for further information:

[edit] External links


Coordinates: 35°00′42″N 135°46′05″E / 35.01167°N 135.76806°E / 35.01167; 135.76806

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