Holy Toledo, this tree is outta this world
Hmmm. Cosmic Bonsai in the Great White North? Iβm in Ohio, and I guess they like outer space a lot; itβs a fact that more U.S. astronauts have been from Ohio than any other state.

John, from Toledo, one of my friends for a long time, has been going to the convention for the Bonsai Societies of Florida for two years now. He got to see Walter Pall, Mauro Stemberger, and many others in years past.
This year he got to meet and take workshops with Laurent Darrieux from France, the creator of the Cosmic Bonsai approach to styling trees.

Some people see it as blasphemy, some see it as a narcissistic offense, some see it as silly. But what it really is, in imaginative terms, is a question βwhat if we travel to another world, with, maybe, higher gravity, or two suns, or a long rotational period, what would those trees grow like?β
Artistically, it is a valid question. Artistically, it works too. When it is practiced well (just like any style, any idea, or even traditional bonsai) it works as Art. There are those that may say it isnβt bonsai, but some of those same people say that the flat top style of trees, whether the American bald cypress flat top, or the South African style Pierneef flat top, arenβt bonsai either. Uh huh.
Iβm sorry, but bonsai is not a Japanese art. It is a Japanese word, and it is very Japanese traditionally (but itβs dying in the country) but thatβs just because, when we modern practitioners of bonsai decided to give it a universal name, a certain Chairman in the east was intent on destroying traditional arts with his Cultural Revolution. so it was named βBonsaiβ.
When I was learning bonsai, I read all the old books, and took to heart the challenge that the early Japanese bonsai masters gave us when they started to travel and teach bonsai throughout the world.
They told us not to mimic Japanese bonsai, but to find new species of trees, and new forms of design, and expression, to celebrate not only the character of our countries, but also the natural world we saw around us.
Hereβs my question to you: What if our imaginations also let us see the world differently too? Say another world? Thatβs Cosmic Bonsai.
To categorically discard the concept because itβs not how you learned it is everything that people accuse Laurent of: arrogance.
Heβs an artist. He has to create. And to show others his vision. Heβs not being allowed to do it. Well, except in Florida, my backyard.
Phew, thatβs some heady stuff. Anywayβ¦Hereβs a banana pepper in the traditional style.

Here it is in the Cosmic Style:

They both go well in an omelette (French word btw).
Below (and some pics above) is a tiger bark ficus (or Golden Gate, or kinman, or kemang, or whatever you want to call it) that John made in Toledo after he got back from the Orlando convention.

I took the wire off andβ¦

β¦.the branches stayed put. Surprisingly. It was a mere two months or less.

I think we need a rock outcropping to give the base some drama. and to expose the roots and give some repetition of movement to the composition.

John had the idea to add some fossil looking carvings to the rock (maybe next year).

Hi John. I made him rewire it.

While I enjoyed someβ¦.

β¦.coffee?

And thatβs it for now. Iβll add updates as I get them.

Let me know how you think, feel, or not, about the Cosmic style.
I wonβt censor them. Iβm not about that, I believe in freedom of expression.
BYEEEEEEEE!