Two weeks in northeastern Kyushu, Japan (May 2024)

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This site shows photos I took during a two-week trip to northeastern Kyushu in May 2024. Although I did not have a single goal for this trip, I was particularly interested in visiting sites of ancient stone Buddha sculptures called magaibutsu (磨崖仏), or sometimes sekibutsu (石仏), most of them dating from the 12th century (late Heian period). These are large sculptures (see photos above) that have been carved directly into natural rock walls and not detached from these walls. While such stone sculptures have flourished in Afghanistan, India, and China, they are rarer in Japan, where large Buddha statues are usually made of wood or metal and are not permanently linked to any support. However, northeastern Kyushu is the region of Japan that has the highest concentration of magaibutsu. There, the sculptures were made in ignimbrite, a type of tuff produced by the lithification of volcanic ash from Mount Aso. This rock being relatively soft, it was suitable for making large carvings, but it was also subject to erosion. Sculptors often chose well-protected sites, such as large cavities, or dug cavities themselves, so a number of these sculptures remain surprisingly well preserved today. The allure and proportions of several of these sculptures (notably, those of Usuki, Sugao, and Oita Motomachi) are typical of a sculpting style created by Japanese sculptor Jocho (定朝) in the mid-11th century.

 

 

This interest (and other interests) led me to lay out a trip with visits to the following places (see above map): Usuki, Fuko-ji, Sugao, Takachiho, Kitsuki, the Kunisaki peninsula, Usa Jingu, and Nakatsu. Because Oita City and Beppu were convenient public transportation hubs and offer numerous hotel accommodations, I used them as bases for reaching these various places. At the end of the trip, I did a one-day excursion to Karatsu and the nearby fishing village of Yobuko in northwestern Kyushu before flying back home from Fukuoka. This excursion was an outlier in the overall trip.

 

(Note: The distinction between magaibutsu and sekibutsu is a bit subtle. According to these two sites (1 and 2), the term magaibutsu refers to stone carvings that cannot be moved or seen from behind, like relief and semi-relief, while the term sekibutsu refers to fully three-dimensional stone statues that are physically separated from any support. Hence, the term magaibutsu should be used at all the sites I visited. However, at some of these sites (like in Usuki), certain sculptures stand so prominently off their wall supports, without being separated from them, that they are sometimes referred to as sekibutsu. So, I will drop these two terms, and instead use words I am more familiar with, like relief, carving, or sculpture, which do not suggest a physical separation from a support.)

 

To see pictures of this trip click on the following links:

 

Oita and Beppu

Usuki

Fuko-ji and Sugao

Takachiho

 

Kitsuki

Kunisaki peninsula

Usa Jingu and Nakatsu

Karatsu and Yobuko

 

To see pictures of my other recent trips to Japan, click on the following links:

- 2016: Kiso valley and Kii peninsula,

- 2017: Kyushu and Yakushima,

- 2018: Shikoku,

- 2019: San-in coast.

 

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