In Melbourne last week my senior students' exercise was to make a "Summer" arrangement. No further explanation was provided, so as to give the students freedom of interpretation.
Eugenia chose a bare branch to represent the dryness of summer and placed two flower stems of Gloriosa Lily Gloriosa superba, to represent the hot colours of the season.
Marcia contrasted the straight stems of three white Agapanthus A. praecox, with the circular form of four Dahlia flowers
Jacqueline also chose a dry branch, which she hung from a tall cylinder. Two Dahlias with an orange flush captured the feel of the summer sun with the fresh contrast of two unidentified green leaves.
Aileen used a drying mass of Xanthorrhoea leaves expressing the dryness of the north wind. A single line of Passion fruit vine Passiflora edulis, gave a feeling of freshness and was wound around the end of the Xanthorrhoea leaves. A single passion fruit sits on the lowest ledge of the vase.
The pale pink flowers of this plant are very delicate and grow in pendulous clusters on the underside of the branches. The underside of the leaf is maroon while the upper surface is green with silver spots. This strong variation of the positive and negative side of the leaves ("in" and "yo" respectively in Japanese), effectively produced two ways to view the ikebana which was made with two branches.








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