Mountains, Mummies, and Modern Art: Ascetic Practice in Yamagata Prefecture

Culture

Changing the Image of Tōhoku

Down in the prefectural capital of Yamagata, meanwhile, with the exception of Yamagata Castle (currently under renovation), there seems to be very little of antiquity. There are some lovely Western-style buildings from the Taishō era (1912–26), but the overriding impression is one of concrete.

Yamagata castle and statue of former lord Mogami Yoshiaki.

Starting this year, in a bid to restore some vitality to this once-bustling town, a team from the Tōhoku University of Art and Design teamed up with the Agency of Cultural Affairs and the Tōhoku Revival Services Organization to organize the Yamagata Biennale, a citywide art event to be held every other autumn. As with another international cultural event hosted in the city, the Documentary Film Festival, the Biennale aims to change the image of Tōhoku by deepening ties between the arts and the local community and enterprises, in the process drawing on the region’s distinctive history and customs.

The grounds of Yamagata Bunshōkan are scattered with interactive exhibits.

Play and Learning as Art Reflects Nature

An exhibition of work by Arai Ryōji at Yamagata Bunshōkan.

“The perception of Tōhoku is of a harsh, grey place, somewhere to be endured,” explains Biennale director Miyamoto Takenori. “But that’s not the case. The winters are long, but that only means that colors are felt all the more keenly when the spring light comes flooding in, and that the green of summer seems even more vivid. I think Tōhoku people actually have a much stronger sense of color.”

He also describes a drive to create a welcoming avenue for people to engage with the arts in a spirit of “discovery and learning,” and many of the exhibits at a number of sites around the city are highly interactive, including workshops on pickling and candle-making, as well as an oddly-shaped soccer pitch in the courtyard of the city’s historic Bunshōkan, the former prefectural office now used as a museum. In the nearby Manabikan (literally “learning hall”), a disused elementary school building, there is also a comic-drawing activity starring local artist Arai Ryōji’s yamabushi-inspired character Hosomichi-kun.

Experiencing Something Primeval

Yamagata’s ascetic heritage finds echoes throughout the Biennale. On display are the savant scribblings of Sugano Sakae, who emerged fully formed on the art scene in his seventies after years of pursuing his art while working at a local fish market, and soundscapes by the nomadic artist and instrument builder Suzuki Akio, who has long viewed nature and his surroundings as his chief sonic collaborator.

Mise Natsunosuke’s exhibition Tōhoku-ga wa kanō ka (“Is Tohoku-style painting possible?”) at the Tōhoku University of Art and Design.

The festival’s extensive musical program includes a number of performances bringing together dancers and visual artists with esteemed performers including the husband-and-wife pop unit Tenniscoats, the musical improviser Ōtomo Yoshihide, and the balladeer Aoba Ichiko. Biennale vice-director Iwai Tenshi, who curates this program, notes: “We want to bring people a sense of what ancient ascetics might have experienced in a cave on one of Yamagata’s holy mountains, or help them hear the sounds of the prehistoric Jōmon period.”

A Modern-Day Yamabushi

Sakamoto Daisaburō whittling additions to his exhibition at Yamagata Bunshōkan.

One participating visual artist with particularly strong ties to this heritage is Sakamoto Daisaburō, who visited the Dewa Sanzan in 2006 and was bitten by the mystical bug. In 2009 he decided to leave Tokyo and relocate to the area, becoming a full-time yamabushi. “I was interested in the roots of Japanese arts and crafts, and it turned out that all sorts of traditional performance—kabuki, nō, and the like—had strong ties to the yamabushi. I became fascinated by this lifestyle and the aesthetic influence of nature and the mountains. I thought it would be interesting to make my own art while following in such ancient footsteps.”

One of the world’s oldest, and most rigidly ascetic, religions is Jainism, which is thought to have originated in India as early as the ninth century BC. The pacifist, celibate followers are known for gently sweeping the ground before them with a soft brush to avoid trampling insects as they walk and observing a strict vegetarian diet that avoids the use of onion and garlic. How interesting that Yamagata should also be the location for a restaurant that purports to serve Japan’s only Jain curries. The richly flavorful dishes are a far more attractive choice for the hungry visitor to Yamagata than tree bark, roots, and arsenic.

▼Further reading

Photography Exhibition: “Tōhoku—Through the Eyes of Japanese Photographers”

With an essay by Iizawa Kōtarō

The Shifting Landscape of Japanese Religion

Our four-article series on faith in Japan

(With thanks to Dainichibō, Chūrenji, and the Yamagata Biennale. The 2014 Biennale runs until October 19. Banner photo: Shinnyokai-shōnin, the sokushinbutsu of Dainichibō, Yamagata Prefecture.)

Related Tags

Tōhoku tourism art Buddhism tradition Shintō mountains religion Yamagata

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