Australian In-Situ Wild Rice Conservation Project


Wander into a certain part
of the Australian bush, and you’ll encounter enormous carvings blasted into the granite boulders and the floodplain. These carvings, in the Mount Bundey area of the Northern Territory, depict lizards, insects, and gigantic stalks of wild rice.
They’re the work of Mitsuaki Tanabe, a Japanese sculptor who started the work in 2010 with the cooperation of the Australian government. Throughout his life, Tanabe dedicated his art to the importance of wild rice and other organisms in the preservation of biodiversity, and his works dot the globe, often depicting seeds. This particular work is meant to raise awareness of the Northern Territory’s wild rice varieties, which include
Oryza officinalis
,
Oryza rufipogon
,
Oryza meridionalis
, and
Oryza australiensis.
For 10 years, Tanabe traveled to Australia during the dry season to work on the project. Tragically, Tanabe passed away before he could finish the work, but his son, Taka Tanabe, along with some sculptor friends, completed the pieces in 2016.