or are lucky enough to be visiting,
you can call into one
of the largest open air museums in the world,
and visit The Echigo-Tsumari Art Field festival, that kicked off at the end of July and runs until September 17,
so you will have 5 weekends to immerse yourself in one of the
largest art festivals in the world, in one of the most unlikely places in the
world, known for their heavy snowfall in winter, the Echigo-Tsumari region is
located in mountainous Niigata – easily accessible from Tokyo in a little over
an hour by train,
once there, you’ll traverse 200 villages across roughly
190,000 acres, all dotted with over 350 site-specific artworks created by
artists from all over the world, the organizers admit, it’s an “absolutely
inefficient approach deliberately at odds with the rationalization and
efficiency of modern society.” the intention is to interact with the beauty and
richness of the land, which serves as a canvas for art,
the triennial has been held every 3 years since 2000,
perhaps the most anticipated is the restoration
of the Kiyotsu Gorge Tunnel by Ma Yansong of MAD Architects,the tunnel
itself is an immersive art piece that breaks out into 3 art spaces before
culminating in the final “Light Cave.” this diagram above maps out the
revitalized Kiyotsu Gorge Tunnel – a historic, 750-meter passageway that cuts
through distinctive rock formations, offering panoramic views over one of
Japan’s three great chasms, what a great, in both senses of the word, place to
visit.
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