In Kyoto's temples, stones and sand are used by monks to present nature and the universe, combining Zen spirit with landscape painting artistic conception, condensing the invisible meaning with tangible objects, and forming a unique "dead landscape" in Japan. "Standing stone in no pool and no water, the name is dry landscape" is the earliest record of dry landscape in "Zuoting Notes". In the dry landscape of Long'an Temple, there is no live water and flowering plants common in the design of forest gardens, only inanimate stones and white sand. The fleeting beauty of nature, such as water ripples, ripples, sprays, etc., stripped away all the excess appearances through simplified, condensed, and whitened methods, leaving only the original appearance of the ancient unchanged.