1 upcoming event
Kasama Himatsuri Pottery Festival
There are as many shapes of vessel as there are artists. Kasama in Ibaraki is one of the K…
There are as many shapes of vessel as there are artists. Kasama in Ibaraki is one of the Kanto region's leading pottery towns, and during Golden Week it holds the Himatsuri pottery festival. More than two hundred exhibit: kilns, ceramic artists, individual makers. The mark of Kasama ware is that it has no fixed mark; there is no rule that it must be a certain way, so each artist creates freely. Plain folk craft and avant-garde forms stand side by side in the same market. Makers mind their own tents, and when a customer picks up a piece and says, this is lovely, the artist nods, pleased. Between buyer and maker, there is no distance here. The festival began in 1982, started by the potters themselves. Because there are no rules, there is freedom; its diversity is the market's richness. One of Ibaraki's defining pottery markets.
Kilns and shrines share the same hillside air in Kasama. The town sits in a basin ringed by the Keisoku hills to the north and the Tsukuba range to the southwest, and that enclosure gives it a particular stillness — not remoteness, but a sense of things accumulating quietly over time. Kasama-yaki, the local ceramic tradition, is visible everywhere: in gallery windows, in workshop doorways, in the unglazed seconds stacked outside studios near the station. The Ibaraki Ceramic Art Museum holds the more formal expressions of this craft, but the living version is found in the smaller kilns scattered through the residential streets.
Kasama Inari Shrine anchors the older layer of the town — a major pilgrimage site that draws crowds for the autumn chrysanthemum festival, when the shrine grounds fill with massed blooms. The approach streets around it still carry the proportions of a gate-town: narrow frontages, shops selling sembei and lacquerware, the smell of incense drifting past ordinary lunch counters. Farther out, near the hamlet of Inada, a different industry surfaces — Inada-ishi, the pale granite quarried here since the Meiji era, used in public buildings across the country. The Stone Centennial Hall beside Inada Station tells that story without ceremony.
Kasama is also chestnut country. The agricultural flatlands to the east produce a harvest that appears in roadside stalls and at the Michi-no-Eki Kasama, where the Kanto Yakimono Liner bus stops on its way from Akihabara. Craft, stone, shrine, and orchard — the town holds these things without forcing them into a single narrative.
Stay in Kasama, Ibaraki
What converges here
- Kataniwa Himeharuze mi Habitat
- Ryogenji Sanmon
- Hanawa Family Residence (Ibaraki Prefecture, Nishi-Ibaraki-gun, Iwama-machi)
- Hanawa Family Residence (Ibaraki Prefecture, Nishi-Ibaraki-gun, Iwama-machi)
- Kasama Inari Shrine Main Hall
- Suigo-Tsukuba
- Mount Wagakuni
- Tomobe
- Iwama
- Kasama
- Shishido
- Inada
- Fukuhara
- Tomobe