Plants &
Gardening
Garden Stories
Bonsai pots hold more than plants
When looking at different bonsai trees, you might notice the stylized beauty of their shapes and textures. A lot of thought and work are put into raising bonsai trees and pruning them just so, but for many bonsai artists, their containers are just as important as the plant itself.
鈥淭he pot and the soil have a relationship just as much as the tree and the pot have a relationship. The tree-to-pot relationship is aesthetic and functional too,鈥 said Chris Baker, curator of bonsai at the 91短视频.
For all gardeners, proper drainage, size, and a suitable material are important considerations. In the art of bonsai, the relationship between tree and container is equally important. It鈥檚 all about the discipline of pairing, according to Baker.
All images and quotations below, courtesy of Chris Baker.

A crabapple tree in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. 鈥淭his is a deciduous tree so it has a glazed pot. The color works well with the white and pink blooms.鈥

A hornbeam tree in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. The pot was made by Eli Akins of Waldo Street Pottery. 鈥淭hough this is a deciduous tree, this does not have a shiny glaze. Instead, the colors are more muted and allow the fall color to stand out. It also is very complementary with bark color in the winter when the leaves have fallen.鈥
.jpg)
A juniper raft in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. 鈥淭his long and shallow pot accentuates the nature of the tree. Junipers prefer a well-draining soil, so this shallow container is not a problem for it, though more frequent watering is needed to care for the tree.鈥

A raintree slab in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. This features a fabricated slab.
.jpg)
An evergreen in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. 鈥淭his tree is paired with a glazed container that was made by artist Paul Katich, the tree's owner.鈥

A maple tree in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. 鈥淭his is a very large and powerful tree. You can see the rectangle pot has straight edges and short, sturdy feet to carry the look of the tree. The blue glaze works well with the fall color.鈥
.jpg)
A pine slab in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. 鈥淭his pine is on a slab to better tell the story on a mountain top. You can see the tree is potted on the opposite side of its direction. This gives balance to the composition, which would not be true had it been planted in the middle of the left side.鈥
.jpg)
A juniper in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. 鈥淭his is a very unique tree with a lot going on in the trunk movement. The round container allows your eye to follow the tree trunk without the container getting in the way as a rectangle might. 鈥
In bonsai terms, trees come in feminine and masculine forms and pots do too. In some cases, the bonsai isn鈥檛 contained by a pot at all, but by a slab or a rock planting.
The key is to make a harmonious pairing, but it isn鈥檛 a perfect science. It鈥檚 more of an art. 鈥淭he purpose of the pot is to enhance the look and make the tree look its best or to tell the story right, so the artist is telling a story about a tree,鈥 Baker said.

A limber pine in the Garden鈥檚 bonsai collection. The tree is between 600 and 1,000 years old. The container, although fairly new, has a rough, aged appearance. The container鈥檚 color represents the environment where the tree was originally collected.
Part of that story is where the bonsai originated. Sometimes, bonsai artists use a container and style that replicates the land or terrain where the bonsai came from. Finding a pot that has similar textures and tones of the environment it was pulled from is one example.
鈥淲e鈥檙e pulling all kinds of cues and an aesthetic value from nature and trying to incorporate it into the container we鈥檙e keeping these trees in,鈥 Baker said. 鈥淲e have a number of trees that are in containers that have reds, yellows, or some earthy tones that might represent the rocky cliff where the tree comes from.鈥
Composition is a strong feature of the bonsai art and can dictate what types of containers are used. Sometimes bonsai artists use long, narrow containers, placing the tree on one side as the branches extend over to the other side to replicate the stretch of land. 鈥淭he length and the extension of that container gives you that visual. Maybe you add a small rock there, and another small plant there that gives you this idea that there鈥檚 this expansion of land,鈥 he said.
Consideration of color is also a critical part of the process. Artists choose whether they want contrasting colors or more of a complementary pairing. 鈥淵ou might have a teal-ish blue pot and pair it with a maple鈥攕omething with lots of reds, orange, and yellows for contrast,鈥 Baker said. Unglazed brown pots with more earthy tones are often paired with evergreens and junipers, offering a more symbiotic look.
Then there鈥檚 age, both of the tree and the pot. 鈥淵ou certainly wouldn't take a 300-year-old pine with cracked bark and throw it in a shiny, glazed container that you just got off of a production line,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o having an aged pot that has patina on it and age adds to the story of the tree.鈥
It's about finding the right home for each tree, and that pairing process is something Baker looks forward to in late winter and early spring. 鈥淚t gives us an opportunity to change a tree鈥檚 entire look by changing the container or using a stone to plant on,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his really gets the creative juices flowing and gets us ready for the season ahead.鈥
