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Kunisaki Peninsula Art Festival
In a land of Buddhas, contemporary art takes up residence. The Kunisaki Peninsula in Oita…
In a land of Buddhas, contemporary art takes up residence. The Kunisaki Peninsula in Oita is a round peninsula jutting into the Seto Inland Sea, long a sacred ground of mountain Buddhism. Its temple complex, called Rokugo Manzan, its stone Buddhas, its cliff carvings, for more than a thousand years people have walked these mountains and prayed to the Buddhas. Onto this peninsula, contemporary art was placed. Within the old landscape of prayer, new expression quietly stands. Buddhism and contemporary art seem far apart, yet both are attempts to give form to what cannot be seen. Permanent works are scattered across the peninsula; you tour them by car or on foot, guided by a map. Along the way, terraced fields spread, villages appear, a temple bell sounds. The search for art becomes a journey into the peninsula itself, where the old and the new meet.
Stone lanterns line the approach before the temple name registers. On the Kunisaki Peninsula, the act of walking between shrines and Buddhist halls feels less like sightseeing than like moving through a landscape that never fully separated the two traditions. The fusion of mountain asceticism, Usahachiman worship, and Buddhist practice — what the region calls Rokugo Manzan culture — left behind not a museum but a living topography of carved rock and moss-covered paths connecting Futago-ji, Iwato-ji, and a dozen other temple complexes across the ridges radiating from Futago-yama.
Fires mark the calendar here. At Iwato-ji, the Shushonikai ritual brings torchlight and demon figures into the winter air; at Iwakura-sha, the Kebes Festival — a fire rite listed as an important intangible folk cultural property — draws local participants rather than crowds. These are not performances staged for visitors. The fishing harbors at Furue and Ōmi supply the markets with tachiuo, the long silver beltfish, and kuruma-ebi, the tiger prawn that the peninsula's coastal waters produce in quantity. Eating either at a counter near the port involves little ceremony and considerable attention to the plate.
Oita Airport sits on a reclaimed island just off the peninsula's coast, making Kunisaki oddly accessible for a place that feels genuinely peripheral. Ferries from Taketazu Port reach Yamaguchi Prefecture across the Seto Inland Sea. The peninsula holds both the industrial campuses of Canon and Sony and the stone pagoda at Iwato-ji designated as an important cultural property — adjacencies that the place absorbs without apparent contradiction.
Stay in Kunisaki, Oita
What converges here
- Miura Baien Former Residence
- Kamezuka Tumulus
- Ankoku-ji Settlement Site
- Onizuka Tumulus
- Iwato-ji Hoto
- Shoon-ji Temple Hoto Pagoda
- Nagaki Family Hoto
- Hoto (Treasure Pagoda)
- Senfuku-ji Butsuden
- Senfukuji Kaizando
- Setonaikai
- Mount Futago
- Oita Airport
- Furue Fishing Port
- Furumachi Fishing Port
- Oumi Fishing Port
- Taneda Fishing Port
- Omoki Fishing Port