Japan

The Zen art and aesthetic principles were introduced into Japan in 1191 that integrated art and aesthetics along with the diversity of Japanese cultured activities such as poetry, paintings, flower arrangement, and swordsmanship. With the long history of teachings that inspired oral communication, no scholars can record them early. The values of this principle pointed toward being truer to the natural world, which is unsymmetrical and imperfect. The relevant goal of Fukinsei principle is to highlight “isness” or “suchness” in reality, by accepting one’s nature that inevitably comprised imperfections and irregularities for the ease of mindful living and mental health. Art has affected affecting their thinking on how to see nature in a certain way. We all see actual things under the impact of art that we have observed before and giving a similar definition to them. Art has affected us psychologically, in which we observe things not based on our sensory experience but by cognitive and intellectual faculties (Burdett). The Zen principle pointed out the imaginative motivation toward perfection and symmetry in each individual. Fukinsei principle helps people to appreciate the imperfection of things around and themselves to see nature in its naked form. Life is made of random things that are unsymmetrical and imperfect to make up the beauty we have seen daily.

Coordinates

Latitude: 36.204824000000
Longitude: 138.252924000000