Wara art
Wara art is the Japanese art of making large sculptures from rice straw.
Wara art in Japan
Traditionally, rice straw was used for making tatami mats and other objects. At the beginning of the 21st century, these objects were increasingly replaced by manmade materials, leaving rice farmers with a problem, namely what to do with the rice straw.In 2007, the farming community in Niigata prefecture, Japan, a major rice growing prefecture, asked Professor Shingo Miyajima of the Department of Science and Design at the Musashino University to find a creative solution for the problem.
He suggested using the straw to create sculptures of animals supported by a wooden frame. This straw art is called in Japan, wara art, “wara” meaning rice straw.
Since 2007, there have been annual festivals of wara art in Niigata prefecture, Nishikan-ku ward.
Some of the Wara art statues have been as high as 9 metres tall, but they are usually around 4 metres in height.