How digital art is transforming the museum experience
From floating orchids to an infinite crystal universe, award-winning art collective teamLab continues to push the boundaries of immersive art. (Excerpt from the text)
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From floating orchids to an infinite crystal universe, award-winning art collective teamLab continues to push the boundaries of immersive art. (Excerpt from the text)
In 1924, prominent Italian composer Giacomo Puccini wrote an opera about a Chinese emperor endeavouring to find a suitor for his unmarried daughter, Princess Turandot. Puccini died before he could complete the final act of his last masterpiece, which left the door open for subsequent generations of composers and artists to offer their interpretations of the show. Now, almost a century after Puccini's death, art collective teamLab has made its foray into scenography with a new staging of Turandot in collaboration with director Daniel Kramer. (Excerpt from the text)
teamLab forays into scenography with Director Daniel Kramer’s interpretation of Giacomo Puccini's final opera Turandot, to be performed in Tokyo, following its premiere in Geneva.(Excerpt from the text)
teamLab returns to Mifuneyama Rakuen with their colorful and interactive digital art installations, this time featuring over 20 installations set in the 500,000 square meter garden. It was included in the “Giant hot air balloon whales and 15 other outdoor art exhibits to see around the world" by CNN, and this year, the 8th edition of the exhibition, will include a new piece of light that shines and swirls in all the colors of the rainbow. The installation, which combines the history and stories of Mifuneyama Rakuen, can be enjoyed both indoors and outdoors. (Excerpt from the text)
Art collective group teamLab is known for transforming natural settings through unexpected and noninvasive means. After finishing their exhibition at Kairakuen Gardens in Okiyama, teamLab is setting up a new dreamscape in the Nagai Botanical Gardens in Osaka, which is set to debut this summer, 2022.(Excerpt from the text)
Following its debut in 2015, international art collective teamLab returns for the third time to Maison&Objet with an immersive installation titled Resonating Microcosms – Solidified Light Color. Set within a dark room, the installation features an infinitely-expanding space filled with glowing ovoids that emit colors and sounds when visitors interact with them in a poetically choreographed manner.
Art is not normally part of the core business of Xing founder and technology investor Lars Hinrichs – but to bring teamLab’s art to Germany, the Hamburg native made an exception. Together with Managing Director Caren Brockmann, he is responsible for bringing the Digital Art Museum into being. How did this come about, and what can visitors expect? The two explain in this interview.(Excerpt from the text)
Although teamLab is known for mixing technology with art through interactive LEDs, projections, and soundscapes, their newest installation uses the real thing.
Unveiled during the summer, the installation is made up of over 13,000 living orchids that are suspended from the ceiling. The flowers grow along near-invisible wires to give the impression that they’re floating in mid-air.
FLOATING FLOWER GARDEN: Toshiyuki Inoko, leader of interdisciplinary artistic group TeamLab, with an interactive kinetic installation, Floating Flower Garden: Flowers and I are of the Same Root, the Garden and I are One, during a media preview of the TeamLab Planets Garden Area in the Toyosu district of Tokyo.
Superblue, Miami’s new experimental art venue, has opened its doors. Located in a vast unused industrial building in the city’s Allapattah neighborhood, the space transforms 50,000 square foot into an immersive installation space, kicking off an inaugural programme with large-scale works from artists including Es Devlin, James Turrell and teamLab.(Excerpt from the text)
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