Shikoku Island is the least populous of Japan’s four major landmasses. The negative effects of Japan’s declining population and the migration of younger people to employment centers on Honshu and Kyushu Islands are starkly evident there. Many of Shikoku's elementary Schools stand as ‘haikyo’ (ruins), devoid of students due to a lack of local children. Modern yet empty highways cut through the island's mountainous interior linking aging‘ shutter towns’ where countless homes and businesses stand deserted. Residents consider such large-scale infrastructure to be Government 'vanity projects' executed purely to project the image of a modern and progressive Japan. Such projects fail to connect and inject prosperity into aging communities but rather highlight the increasing decline of Shikoku and the absence of opportunities for young people. In some regional towns, up to half the residential buildings stand empty and are known colloquially as ‘akiya’ (empty house). The Japanese Government has recently incentivised the purchase of these homes to encourage young people to return to regional areas. In some cases, homes are offered conditionally 'free' to young couples if they remain in these towns for a given period of time. The population of Nagoro town is now so small that the remaining elderly residents have populated the town with 'scarecrow' mannequins posed as if undertaking the activities of their former neighbours. These images continue my exploration of the Japanese aesthetic philosophy of 'Wabi-Sabi'. This ideology celebrates beauty in all things modest, imperfect, decaying, and impermanent as embodied in anything from a well-loved cooking utensil to the decaying fabric of the built environment. The Japanese consider ‘Wabi-Sabi’ to be an aesthetic consciousness, that finds value in the imperfect and temporary, beyond the confines of appearance. Through ‘Shikoku no Seijaku’ ( Shikoku Silence ) I aim to capture the melancholy beauty that remains in the wake of the region’s pronounced social change whilst documenting the disappearance of vibrant and authentic communities.