Abstract:In world garden history, the Japanese garden occupies an important position, especially after the war, which attracted the attention of all walks of life outside the gardening industry, including art, sculpture, and architecture. Dry landscape, also known as Tang landscape and dry spring, refers to the garden that reproduces pastoral scenery without water. Typical dry landscape gardens are concentrated in the Kyoto area. The creation technique of Ginkakuji Temple centered on white sand has greatly promoted the development of dry landscape gardens, and more gardens with the characteristics of dry landscape have appeared successively since then.