
Echigo-Tsumari Art Field
The world's largest outdoor art festival — 760 artworks by 330 artists from 40 countries scattered across 760 square kilometres of rice terraces and mountain villages in the Tokamachi district. Works are permanently installed in farmhouses, forests, and fields, making every rice paddy potentially a gallery. The Tunnel of Light (James Turrell) alone justifies the journey.
Full day–multiple days
¥4,500 (passport in-season; advance ¥3,500)
Most installations open late Jul–mid Nov; some permanent works accessible year-round — check the official schedule as it varies by triennial cycle
Late July–mid-November (open season)
Tokamachi Station on Hokuhoku Line (from Niigata, 2h)
Location
Why Visit
- 1
James Turrell's "Light Cave" in an abandoned tunnel — one of the world's great light art installations
- 2
760 artworks across 760 square kilometres — the world's largest outdoor art field
- 3
The rice terraces of Hoshitoge at dawn are Japan's finest terraced paddy landscape
Local Tips
A car is essential — the artworks are scattered across 760km² of rural landscape. The passport ticket covers most permanent installations. The Rice Field Art (viewed from a hilltop or drone) and Kinosato Station installations are highlights. The triennial runs every 3 years in summer; check the current schedule before planning.
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