1 upcoming event
KENPOKU ART (Ibaraki North Art Festival)
Sea and mountains: two faces in a single festival. Northern Ibaraki has a coastal area fac…
Sea and mountains: two faces in a single festival. Northern Ibaraki has a coastal area facing the Pacific and a mountainous area called Oku-Kuji, two regions of different character brought together as one stage. By the sea there are cliffs, a lighthouse, fishing ports; in the mountains, gorges, waterfalls, hot springs. Though both are northern Ibaraki, the scenery is utterly different. Into this, contemporary art is set, works of the sea and works of the mountains, savored as you move between them. This region underpinned modern Japan's industry; the name Hitachi even became a company's name. But industry's structure changed, and the population is dwindling. The festival is an attempt to cast light on the region once more, with cutting-edge media art and installations set in nature alike. Art guides you through a little-known northern Ibaraki, from sea to mountain, learning the region's depth in a day.
The glass walls of Hitachi Station frame the Pacific before you've even stepped outside — an unusual architectural gesture for a working industrial city. Hitachi grew from a mine: the old Hitachi Kōzan, developed in the early twentieth century, drew workers and engineers inland and along the coast, and the city that formed around it still carries the practical density of a company town built for production, not tourism.
Yet the industrial surface sits alongside something older. Oiwa Jinja, set on a forested hillside, is said to enshrine an unusually large number of deities for a single site, and the approach has the quiet weight of a place that has absorbed centuries of local belief. Nearby, Kamine Kōen holds the Hitachi Fūryūmono, a festival recognized by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage, with its origins traced to Kōmine Jinja. These are not reconstructed spectacles — they are calendrical anchors for people who live here.
Down at the coast, the Michi-no-Eki Hitachi Osakana Center turns the catch from Kuji fishing port into immediate, unadorned meals — seafood bowls and grilled shellfish eaten at counters that smell of salt and smoke. The hills behind the city rise toward Takasuzuyama, and the cedar groves of Ibukiyama hold a designated natural monument, the Ibuki tree grove. Between the refinery skyline and the forested ridgeline, Hitachi occupies a band of coast where heavy industry and deep-rooted local life have simply grown up together, each indifferent to the other's incongruity.
Stay in Hitachi, Ibaraki
What converges here
- Ibukiyama Ibuki Tree Grove
- Mount Takasuzu
- Hitachi
- Ohmika
- Hitachi-Taga
- Juo
- Ogitsu
- Kuji Fishing Port