A New Tradition Begins: Halloween Ikebana
I thoroughly enjoyed our Ikebana class this week! Ikebana is turning out to be an unexpectedly creative outlet for me, and has opened up new horizons that are here to stay.
The last time I posted Ikebana arrangements, they were beautiful centerpiece lessons from our Sogetsu school textbook, and made of typical flowers like red and pink roses and greenery, which you can see in Joy and More Joy.
This week our lesson was a freestyle arrangement with a Halloween/Fall theme, which means that I got to break out my box of light colored driftwood from my naturalist friend Steve who volunteer to work the trail behind my apartment. I tend to think more sculptural in freestyle too.
Leslie also gave us the option of creating Haunted Halloween Ikebana (clearly an American take on Japanese Ikebana), taking advantage of seasonal materials. I was so inspired that I ended up making 3 different arrangements, using various Ikebana techniques.
#1. Fall Theme. Orange is the salient feature of the first one.
This arrangement features gourds and flowers from Trader Joes, light gray driftwood, and a piece of dark, textured wood I found walking with my friend Ronna in Dobbs Ferry. (Sometimes it takes a village!) Of course, I can’t forget the water in the black container (or suiban in Japanese) which is an important part of this arrangement. I finished this pretty quickly since the design came easily.
#2. Haunted Halloween Theme. While working on a second arrangement on a round white container (similar to the black above), I was startled to hear Leslie suggest that I take the container away.
I actually forgot that she could see what I was doing. It felt like Leslie was in the room, but she was on zoom. And it was a great suggestion and gave the design a more natural look. This was as far as I got in the allotted time. I wasn’t happy because the branches felt so bleak.
I asked the group for feedback during the last half of the lesson when everyone shares. I explained my original vision, and that I had looked for spider web netting to drape on the branches for that spooky quality, but never found it.
Then someone suggested using Spanish moss, and pulling it apart. It was like a light bulb went off! What a terrific idea that is, I’m thinking, especially because I can finally use those two small unopened bags of moss that have been sitting in my closet for a year!
Adding the moss made a major impact and this arrangement finally felt finished. It was conceived of almost as a tableau – almost like a stage set in its own little world. Somehow the addition of the moss reminded me of the Rose Bowl Parade floats with hanging moss that I watch every year on New Years Day, since the Big Ten always played in the Rose Bowl… hopefully with Michigan in it..
Getting spookier?
#3. Halloween. What would you call this one?
This last arrangement I made Sunday night before class. What I’ve found is that it’s a good idea to plan ahead for Monday’s class. I try to pick a direction on Saturday, and then go to Trader Joe’s at 8am on Sunday morning when the flowers are delivered… most of the time.
As I had already bought my orange flowers and was going through this planning process Sunday, I remembered that Steve had given me another piece of wood that had possibilities for this theme. I won’t say that the wood was ugly, just that it has character and I tried using it so many times before but could never make it work. Here’s a closeup of the top.
This time around, I thought it looked rather haunted, and maybe evoking scarecrows I used to see in old movies in the middle of corn fields (am I thinking Wizard of Oz?). So I put the wood in the vase (propping it up on rocks), and added dried grasses that reminded me of straw and scarecrows. Finally, I cut little white mums from large pots on my little patio that I bought at Westchester Greenhouses (a bargain at $8 each for such a large size).
This is what I ended up with. While I designed the arrangement so it could be viewed from all sides on my kitchen counter, this was my “front” when I began.
Here’s the side view.
Here’s what I considered the back, until Leslie got all excited the “back” so it became the “front” of the arrangement.
Leslie said it reminded her of the gargoyles on Notre Dame, which I included below for myself as much as for you.
Now that I’m comparing the two images (the middle gargoyle in the photo vs. the arrangement), I really do see why she said that. The wood has a head (even has an eye!), with the horn coming out, similar to the gargoyle. There’s the beige grass that almost feels like a shoulder, or wing, or whatever is coming out the back of the left gargoyle. The dried grasses come forward almost mimicking the corner curve of the Notre Dame architecture under the gargoyle (any one know what that’s called?).
Arrangements By The Other Students (aka fellow Ikebana addicts…). Carin and Susan had fun with this too. I was impressed with what they both came up with.
Let’s start with Carin’s, which has that decomposing feeling of Dutch vanitas and memento-mori still life paintings, reminding us of the transitory nature of life with its semi-bare branches, fading sunflowers and berries. All that’s missing is the skull… Carin even made her own container by carving out the inside of the pumpkin. She wins my Most Creative award of the week!
Ah, but the skull is here in Susan’s arrangement, which I thought was absolutely delightful! What a happy and macabre skeleton this is in its coffin-like container. She made the dark spider web herself using orthodontic rubberbands, and had wonderful white plant material that felt so ethereal like real spider webs do. (I admit I was envious at the time.) Susan wins my most Spooky Fun Award of the week.
The coincidence is that we both used the same orange flowers even though we live on opposite coasts of the US. When I looked up the flower on my seek app , my new favorite app that identifies species at the click of a photo, it turned out to be a pot marigold. Maybe Susan went to Trader Joe’s too in Oregon, or maybe she’s just lucky enough to have these growing in her backyard, which has been an amazing source of plant materials for this class.
Ikebana is having a major impact on my life – both in my everyday and artistic worlds. I take longer walks and look for different trails and habitats, studying the plants and trees as I go. After working with natural materials every week for a year, I went down to the garage to get my fake gourds with the stand I’ve been using forever for the fall. This time I had to put the fake ones back and fill the stand with real gourds from Trader Joes.
It’s funny but I’m already looking forward to next year’s Halloween Ikebana arrangement. That’s how I know this is really the start of a new tradition.
Happy Halloween!