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)
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)
“We believe very strongly that art needs a white cube, like this," Glimcher said, motioning to the show of strangely wan charcoal drawings by Romanian artist Adrian Ghenie on the walls around him, “but it also now needs a black box for digital and technology artists and new-media artists creating environments." That new ground floor is Pace’s black box, where a show by the Japanese tech collective TeamLab is on view.(Excerpt from the text)
Lines swirl and expand across the screen in a new series of dynamic digital artworks unveiled by teamLab at Pace Gallery in Geneva. Titled Dissipative Figures, the five monitor-based works speak to the transmission of energy that occurs between the body and its surroundings, particularly when in motion, such as a flock of birds flapping their wings in flight or a human body running through space.(Excerpt from the text)
Spring has arrived in Japan, and the nation is going wild for sakura, or cherry blossoms. Every year around this season, an entire industry is created around the sakura plant, from sakura cookies, wine and dishes to soap, makeup and fashion accessories. And, of course, the most important one is the tourism created around sakura viewing. The sakura plant is also getting a digital upgrade with some avant-garde art. Phoebe Amoroso takes us to the springtime celebrations in Tokyo that could well become a perennial fixture.(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. (Excerpt from the text)
Digital art collective teamLab will open their second museum in China, teamLab Massless, in Beijing this year, following the opening of teamLab Borderless in Shanghai 2019. Located on the top floor of Beijing’s shopping mall Chaoyang Joy City Hall, the 10,000-square-meter space will be the neighbor of U2, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art’s new museum that opened on the same floor in December. (Excerpt from the text)
Most of teamLab’s site-specific exhibitions are available year-round, but this wintertime light-up in Ibaraki is only as long as the plum blossom season. Set to be held in the historical Kairakuen Garden from February 1 to March 31, this outdoor teamLab exhibition is a forest of interactive digital artworks. (Excerpt from the text)
teamLab has become world-renowned for enthralling installations that transport audiences into otherworldly destinations. For the next stop, the international art collective will transform Paris’ Maison&Objet tradeshow into a sea of glowing ovoids.(Excerpt from the text)
As the clouds of butterflies came rushing at me, I swayed on my feet, entranced but also disoriented.
My twin sons, Gege and Didi, didn’t hesitate. They ran full speed toward the dazzling, shifting images and climbed up the tilted walls at the new teamLab exhibit at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.(Excerpt from the text)
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