Depicting Sake Breweries — Reflections on the “Sake Brewery Sketches” Exhibition

I have sketched 1,358 sake breweries across Japan. Of these, I personally visited around 900; the rest were based on photographs taken by friends or provided by the brewery owners themselves. The project took roughly ten years to complete, but it was truly a joyful undertaking.

I would like to share what inspired me to begin sketching sake breweries in the first place.

I have loved sake since I was young. One day, I noticed how fascinating the designs of the bottle caps were. Moreover, the caps are made of surface-treated steel sheet — the very material I specialized in professionally.

I felt compelled to collect them, and began buying issho-bin bottles of sake. By the time my collection reached around 200 different caps, I realized that I could no longer expand it without visiting breweries in person.

Around that time, I reached retirement. As a pleasant diversion from the research projects I had just begun, I visited a nearby brewery — Kubota Brewery in Sagamihara City.

When I arrived, I found an old kura building surrounded by large trees. It struck me as a picturesque scene. Having enjoyed painting as a hobby since my youth, I immediately realized that sake breweries would make compelling subjects.

That visit marked the beginning of my brewery sketching journey. I started locally in Kanagawa Prefecture, sketching one brewery a day directly in front of the buildings, then buying a bottle of sake before heading home.

Gradually, I expanded my travels to the Kanto and Tohoku regions.

Many breweries featured towering old trees or kura buildings more than a century old, making them ideal subjects for sketching.

However, due to various site constraints, not every drawing can stand alone as a fully composed tableau. It may be best to view them primarily as documentary records.

Sadly, some of the breweries I sketched have since closed. The number of sake breweries in Japan is declining rapidly, and I find this deeply saddening.

For that reason, I believe these sketches hold value as records — preserving the appearance of sake breweries as they once were.

I would be delighted if viewers could sense, even slightly, the distinctive atmosphere each brewery possesses and the subtle differences that make each one unique.

Painter Chuichi Kato

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • pinterest

Production Regionality Articles

PICK UP

sake

ARE YOU OF LEGAL
DRINKING AGE?

Are you of legal drinking age?
By entering this website, you certify that you are of
legal drinking age in the country you reside in.