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Inujima Art Project: Ruins as Canvas
Inujima had a copper refinery that operated for just a decade before closing in 1919, leav…
Inujima had a copper refinery that operated for just a decade before closing in 1919, leaving behind smokestacks and furnace buildings that now house contemporary art. The island is a twenty-minute ferry ride from the Okayama coast and receives a fraction of the visitors that go to Naoshima. This is the point.
The art here — installations that use the refinery's thermal mass to regulate temperature without electricity, works that reference the novelist Mishima Yukio in ways that take time to understand — requires the silence that comes with being overlooked. The buildings are only partly restored. The industrial ruins are present as ruins, not as backdrop. The combination is unlike anything on the more famous islands of the Setouchi art network.
Inujima rewards visitors who come without expectations calibrated by Naoshima. It is a smaller place, a quieter place, and in some ways a more serious one — the encounter between modern art and modern industrial decline conducted without the reassurance of crowds and gift shops. The ferry schedule limits how long you can stay, which turns out to be enough.
The blades made in Osafune have been shaping steel for centuries, and the Bizen Osafune Sword Museum still holds that lineage — demonstrations, archived works, the particular quiet of a room where edged things are displayed with care. Setouchi City, formed when three towns merged in 2004, carries this craft identity alongside its coastline, the two sitting in an unlikely but coherent pairing.
Ushimado, facing the island-scattered sea to the south, was once a port of call for Korean diplomatic missions during the Edo period. Honrenji temple sheltered those delegations, and the calligraphic scrolls they left behind are now registered as part of the UNESCO Memory of the World program. The Kaiyū Bunka-kan — housed in a Meiji-era police station — holds exhibits on both the Korean envoys and the local danjiri festival culture, the kind of layered archive that accumulates only where actual events, not curated narratives, once took place. Nearby, the Ushimado Olive Garden spreads across a hillside, its trees producing fruit that ends up in bottles sold locally alongside oysters, peaches, and the rice-and-pickled-vegetable dish called dodome-se.
On Nagashima, two national leprosarium facilities — Aiseien and Ōku Kōmyōen — stand as sober reminders of a history that Japan is still reckoning with. Their presence gives the area a moral weight that coexists, without irony, with the marina at Ushimado harbor and the leisure boats moored in long rows. This is a place where the record is uneven and intact.
Stay in Setochi, Okayama
What converges here
- Samukaze Ancient Kiln Site Cluster
- Kadota Shell Mound
- Honren-ji Temple Chumon (Middle Gate)
- Honren-ji Main Hall
- Honren-ji Banjindo
- Honrenji Banjindo
- Honren-ji Temple Banjindo
- Yokeiji Hondo
- Setonaikai
- Oku
- Osafune
- Otomi