|  Also 
      called shichigosan ishigumi 七五三石組 Lit. seven, five three style garden. 
      The arrangement of 15 stones or pruned plants to produce three groups of 
      seven, five and three units. Originating in Chinese Daoism, specifically 
      in the "harmony of odd numbers" found in the Iching 易経. The belief that 
      these number are auspicious persisted in Japan from the Nara period and 
      the seven-five-three arrangement became a basic ordering principle in a 
      number of arts. While even-numbered groupings are associated with symmetrical 
      composition, the asymmetry of odd-numbered arrangements creates a more dynamic 
      composition. Shichigosan arrangements in stone can be seen in the 
      gardens at the Honbou 本坊 and Shinju'an 真珠庵 at Daitokuji 大徳寺 as well at at 
      Ryouanji 竜安寺, Kyoto. The garden at Shoudenji 正伝寺 presents a shichigosan 
      composition in pruned azaleas. |