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This club was established many years ago as a non-profit organization to
promote interest, knowledge and understanding in the various earth
sciences...in particular, the subjects of mineralogy, geology, archeology,
paleontology and lapidary.
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Rock & Arrowhead Club
Klamath Falls ~ Oregon
2/10/2010
BONSEKI
Herb Bastuscheck
American Master of an Ancient Japanese Art
by Denise Bicknell
25315 Oakhurst
Spring, Texas 77386
Rockmom1@charter.net
Member of the Houston Gem & Mineral Society

Herb Bastuscheck and I first met online at Bob’s Rock Shop. At that time he was living in Japan and teaching
conversational English to Japanese students ages three to seventy nine. In July, 2004 we finally met in person in Karnes
County, Texas, where we gathered for a collecting outing along with my husband Tim, Larry McAuley from Leander,
Texas, and Virgil Richards from Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. At the end of our wonderful day collecting fossils, fossil wood,
and a few mineral specimens, we met at Larry’s home where Elisa, Larry’s wife, and Regina, Virgil’s wife, had prepared a
delicious meal of marinated smoked burgers and other goodies for us to enjoy. After dinner Herb set up his bonseki
materials and demonstrated that ancient Japanese art. Bonseki is the art of creating a landscape on a black rectangular
or oval lacquer tray using white sand, pebbles, and small rocks. Bon means “tray” and seki means “rock,” so bonseki
translates as “tray with rocks.” It was developed at the Ryuanji Temple in Kyoto with the samurai Hosokawa family.
Bonseki is similar to the tea ceremony, where meditation accompanies a learned pattern of actions. Finished bonseki
trays were placed in the little alcoves below the hanging scrolls in family tea ceremony rooms. When the art form was
developed 600 to 800 years ago, it was much more stylized than it is today. About 100 years ago, bonseki artists went to
Europe to study art, and upon their return to Japan, they influenced the creation of photo-like pictures. Today colored
rocks, fossils, and miniature structures such as bridges and temples are sometimes added. Herb creates these sand
paintings using small tools such as swan feathers, small spoons, and sieves that are ceremonially placed about his
workspace. The typical boneski landscape contains features such as Mt Fuji, rivers, lakes, mountains, or waterfalls. A
scene may take two hours or more to create, while a quick demonstration takes as little as twenty minutes. The art form is
learned in increments by mastering individual features such as a river or a mountain. When one topic is mastered, the
artists move on to another topic. Eventually the artist will begin to combine subjects to create complete landscapes.
These artists will then just wipe the sand away, destroying the scene with a brush of the hand. Occasionally powdered
glue may be added to the sand and set with steam to create a more permanent display although this generally is not the
norm. Herb’s sensei, 92-year-old Masa Saito, has practiced the art for 50 years and has obtained the highest ranking—a
gold embroidered crest on a yellow tray scarf. Herb, the only non-Japanese bonseki master, reached his Rank of a gold
embroidered crest on a purple tray scarf after 12 years of weekly lessons. Unfortunately, bonseki is a dying art form.
Younger folks are not inclined to commit to the amount of time it takes to learn this ancient art. Most of the active
members are over 50, and many are in their 70s or 80s. Less than 10 percent are in their 20s to 40s. Herb considers it an
honor to be able to show an art form that so few folks have heard of. He tells me that in all the time he spent in Japan, he
only met two Japanese who knew what it was! Herb and his wife, Sachiko are retired and now reside in Oregon where he
is actively involved in collecting rocks, minerals, and fossils, and in teaching earth sciences through a school show and
tell program.