Rice fields of Japan -
stunning
|
Looks ordinary
enough....... But watch as the rice
grows!!!!!!
|
|
|
Stunning crop art has
sprung up across rice fields in Japan , but this
is no alien creation. The designs have been
cleverly PLANTED! Farmers creating the huge
displays use no ink or
dye. Instead, different
color rice plants have been precisely and
strategically arranged and grown in the paddy
fields. As summer progresses and the plants
shoot up, the detailed artwork begins to
emerge.
|
|
|
A Sengoku warrior on
horseback has been created
from hundreds of thousands of rice plants.
The colors are
created by using different varieties of rice
plants, whose leaves grow in certain colors.
This photo was taken in Inakadate, Japan
.
|
|
|
Napoleon on horseback
can be seen from the skies. This was created by
precision planting and months of planning by
villagers and farmers located in Ink date, Japan
.
|
|
|
Fictional warrior Nape
Kanetsugu and his wife, Osen, whose lives are
featured on the television
series'Tenchijin' appear in fields in
the town of
Yonezawa in the Yamagata
prefecture of Japan ...
|
|
|
This year, various
artwork has popped up in other
rice-farming areas of Japan ,
including designs of deer dancers.
Smaller works of 'crop-art' can be seen in
other rice-farming areas of Japan such as
this image of Doraemon and deer dancers.
The farmers create the
murals
by planting little purple and yellow-leafed
Kodaimai rice along with their local
green-leafed Tsugaru, a Roman variety, to create
the colored patterns in the time between
planting and harvesting in September.
The murals in Inakadate
cover 15,000 square meters of paddy
fields.
|
|
|
From ground level, the
designs are invisible, and viewers have to
climb the mock castle tower of the village
office to get a glimpse of the work.
|
|
|
Closer to the image, the
careful placement of the
thousands of rice plants in
the paddy fields can be seen. Rice-paddy art was
started there in 1993 as a local revitalization
project, an idea that grew from meetings
of the village committees. The different
varieties of rice plants grow alongside each
other to create the masterpieces. In the first
nine years, the village office workers and local
farmers grew a simple design of Mount
Iwaki every year. But their ideas grew
more complicated and attracted more
attention. In 2005, agreements between
landowners allowed the creation of
enormous rice paddy art. A year later,
organizers used computers to precisely plot the
planting of four differently colored rice
varieties that bring the images to
life!
TRULY A WORK OF
ART!!
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Just click on the comment button for each post that you are interested in. If you are not a blogger you may comment without a password by choosing the Name/URL button and putting in e.g. your name and then entering your comment in the large text box and then click on the publish comment button down below! :)