Cherry blossom village as far as the eye can see “Iwaki Manbonsakura Project” by Mr. Tadashige Shiga / Iwaki City, Fukushima Prefecture

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A 250-year project to create a village of cherry trees as far as the eye can see

Let’s fill our hometown with 99,000 cherry trees and leave them to our children. An incredibly grand project is currently underway in Iwaki City. The project is called the ” Iwaki Mambonzakura Project. We visited the stage of the project, which has attracted the participation of world-renowned artists.

The “Iwaki Manbonzakura Project” was launched two months after the Great East Japan Earthquake, with the sincere wishes of the people of Iwaki gathered together. Mr. Tadashige Shiga plays a central role in the project. In the book “The Giant Who Walks in the Sky” by Kawauchi Ario, who won the Ken Kaiko Nonfiction Prize this year, he appears as “Iwaki’s amazing old man.

The place we were aiming for was on a hill overlooking rice paddies. The wooden corridor, 160 meters long, stretches upward like a dragon from there. The sign at the entrance read “Iwaki Corridor Art Museum. Hidetoshi Nakata, who was looking at the exhibits on the wall, stopped in front of a photo.
Is this another of Mr. Tsai’s works?” Mr. Shiga nodded yes.
It is a work called “Gift from Iwaki,” which has been exhibited around the world. For every exhibition, we, the Iwaki team, go there to help assemble it. Mr. Tsai may just want to play along, though.
With a mischievous smile, Mr. Shiga told us how he and his ally, Cai Guo-Qiang, created the museum here.

Cai Guo-Qiang is a contemporary artist from Fujian, China. He describes Iwaki as his second hometown, and is currently based in New York and continues his creative activities around the world. Thirty years ago. As a student at Tsukuba University and a fledgling artist, Cai had a chance to hold a solo exhibition at an art gallery in Iwaki. At that time, Mr. Shiga purchased a painting, and the two became friends. Their friendship continued even after Ms. Tsai left for the world.
When the earthquake struck seven years ago, Mr. Tsai immediately rushed to Iwaki. Hearing about the “10,000 Cherry Blossoms Project,” he suggested that we create an art museum

Painting the Cherry Blossom Landscape of the Future.

Before the earthquake, the original trees had to be cut down to plant cherry trees. Before the earthquake, thinned wood sold for 50,000-60,000 yen per hectare, but after the earthquake, the price collapsed. When I told them that we were in the red, they said, “Then let’s build with the timber. I told them it would be easy to maintain, so we decided on a corridor style.
Based on Mr. Tsai’s sketches, a total of 400 volunteers worked for six months to construct the building. Currently, four of Tsai’s works are on display on the site, surrounded by an outdoor stage, tree house, swings, and other structures built by Shiga and other volunteers. A café space, library, and other facilities are currently under construction.

They plant 400 to 500 cherry trees a year, and have reached a total of 4,000 trees to date. At this rate, it will take about 200 to 250 years to reach the goal, Shiga says with a laugh.
In the future,” he says with a laugh. In the future, I would like to fill the rice paddies in front of us with cherry trees.

Looking where Shiga-san is pointing, Nakata-san says, “It’s a great view.
It would be interesting to have a museum that is constantly evolving, and since so many people have put so much thought into this place, why don’t we come up with a system to make it known to even more people?”
The rice fields are beautiful here, so why not hold a harvest festival in the fall?
Their strategy meeting around the hearth continued until the sun went down.

Reference links

Iwaki Corridor Museum of Art
7 Sosaku, Taira Nakagamiyaji, Iwaki City, Fukushima Prefecture

Iwaki Manbonsakura Project
https://www.mansaku99.com/home

Iwaki Manbonzakura info (X: former twitter)
https://twitter.com/99000_sakura

ACCESS

Iwaki Corridor Museum of Art
7 Sosaku, Taira Nakagamiyaji, Iwaki-shi, Fukushima
URL https://www.mansaku99.com/home
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