The moment you step into the forest, the creatures that dwell within it have already sensed your presence. Perhaps, between human and nature, there exists a boundary that cannot be touched by language.
Within our identity lies the idea of "Mu"—emptiness. A fleeting emotion, a phenomenon that escapes definition.
The Japanese garden, often cited as one of the most profound expressions of Japanese sensibility, is built upon the concept of shakkei—a borrowed landscape that mimics nature.
It is a space where people have reinterpreted, composed, and constructed nature itself in the form of beauty.
In this exhibition, we create a "garden that mimics a garden."
Here, the focus is not what is seen, but rather the entrance to an unseen landscape—a threshold of perception.
Scent Architecture is not about objects themselves, but about the sensorial experiences they awaken.
As you stand in this small Garden of Perception,
ask yourself:
Can you feel the wind passing through?