Geyuan
Geyuan | ||
---|---|---|
Hanyu Pinyin Gèyuán | Gè Yuán | |
Wade–Giles | Ko-yüan Ko Yüan |
Geyuan, Ge Yuan, or Ge Garden is located on Dongguan Street in Yangzhou, a city renowned for traditional private gardens, in Jiangsu Province, southeast China.[3]
Geyuan is open to the public, with different sections representing each of the four seasons. Spring is demonstrated with a picture of bamboo and rock. Summer is represented by the steel-grey Taihu stone. Autumn is depicted by Huangshan stone, and winter by Xuan stone.[4]
History
Geyuan was known as "the garden of the long-lived
Architecture
Geyuan is known for its seasonal rock gardens, which paint a colorful landscape: "the rockery in spring is flamboyant like a bright smile, in summer is verdant like sparkling dewdrops, in autumn is clean like a light makeup, and in winter, it is pale like a sleeping beauty". The "spring hill is for visit, summer hill is for sight, the autumn hill is for climbing, and winter hill is for residence".
The garden covers an area of 2.5 hectares (6.2 acres). It is a small, elegant urban wooded mountain garden, primarily made up of bamboo and rocks. Rocks of different hues and shapes are used to represent scenes from the four seasons; hence, the rock garden was named the “Artificial Mountain of Four Seasons”. This artificial mountain has a typical Chinese artistic conception, as described in the poem below:[4]
Mountains in spring look like young maids with light make-up, smiling.
Mountains in summer look like dark green jade as crystal and clear as water drops.
Mountains in autumn look like charming ladies with careful make-up, bright and unstained.
Mountains in winter look like old men sleeping in gloom and coldness.
See also
Gallery
Notes
References
- ^ 園史介紹
- ^ Introduction to the history of Ge Garden
- ISBN 9787805199085.
- ^ a b c "Introduction to the history of Geyuan Garden". ge-garden.net. Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
- ^ "The Geyuan Garden". Cultural China. Archived from the original on 15 November 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- (in English)—Official site