NEWS

designboom に、掲載。(June 23, 2022)

teamLab's new multi-sensory immersive art space in abu dhabi is 'home to infinite curiosity'

Interdisciplinary Tokyo-based collective teamLab unveils teamLab Phenomena, a multi-sensory immersive art venue in Abu Dhabi. Developed in collaboration with the Department of Culture and Tourism and Miral, the Emirate’s leading creator of destinations and experience, the project takes shape as a 17,000 sqm space that combines art and technology, sparking curiosity, imagination, and creativity in all who visit. (Excerpt from the text)

Hype Art に、掲載。(June 23, 2022)

teamLab Visualizes Life as an Uninterrupted Flow of Energy

teamLab is usually known for their ethereal installations that often pit visitors in an otherworldly settings. Comprised of a team of architects, engineers, programmers and artists, the collective’s latest exhibition is noticeably different. For the first time, teamLab will be presenting work in Geneva and will distill their reach to the realm of digital art. (Excerpt from the text)

Smithsonian MAGAZINE に、掲載。(June 16, 2022)

Eight Works of Art in Unlikely Places

Using digital technology like projections and lighting design, teamLAB, a cutting-edge Japanese art collective, transports visitors to otherworldly places from its museum in Tokyo. In a current exhibition called Planets, viewers can become one with nature, walking barefoot through a field of flowers in one mirrored gallery, while in another, spirals of kaleidoscopic colors pool up from the floor. (Excerpt from the text)

designboom に、掲載。(June 9, 2022)

teamLab visualizes flows of energy in new digital artworks at pace gallery in geneva

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)

Meer に、掲載。(August 16, 2021)

Digital Art in the infinite Universe

TeamLab, an international art collective interdisciplinary group of artists, architects, engineers, mathematicians, and ultra-technologists may have been trying to achieve just that. The innovative group has been experimenting on the boundless relationship between humans and the physical world through the technology of art, light, colors, motion, sound, sensations, and science. It attempts to extrapolate a futuristic form of human expression that can be freed from physical constraints. A three-dimensional space can connect the viewers to the artworks by immersing their behavior and movement with the installation’s kinetic energy, as opposed to the conventional method of viewing art from a flat plane.(Excerpt from the text)

The National News に、掲載。(May 30, 2022)

Borderless: what to expect from Jeddah's new digital art museum

On the shores of Al Arbaeen Lagoon, overlooking the Unesco World Heritage listed old town of Jeddah, a new type of museum is taking shape. The first permanent teamLab Borderless museum in the Middle East broke ground last month and the project promises a labyrinthine space of more than 50 artworks across sections that include Borderless World, Athletics Forest and Future Park. It is scheduled to open in 2023, and an exact date will be announced soon.(Excerpt from the text)

Flash Art に、掲載。(May 26, 2022)

A Midsummer Night’s Technodream. A Conversation with Jenna Sutela, Jakob Kudsk Steensen, teamLab, and Marshmallow Laser Feast

In Solaris (1961), Stanisław Lem wrote, “Man has gone out to explore other worlds and other civilizations without having explored his own labyrinth of dark passages and secret chambers, and without finding what lies behind doorways that he himself has sealed.” For the latest edition of “The Uncanny Valley,” four leading artists in the digital art space –– Jenna Sutela, Jakob Kudsk Steensen, teamLab, and Marshmallow Laser Feast –– unseal magical realities in ways that would be inconceivable with traditional media.(Excerpt from the text)