NEWS

Featured on SoraNews24, Feb 1, 2021

Soak in the art literally and figuratively at TeamLab’s and TikTok’s new collab sauna exhibit

Another thought-provoking, gorgeous exhibition from the beloved digital art collective. Time after time, TeamLab captures the imaginations of its patrons, wowing with vivid interpretations on the entwinement between technology and interactive art. Partnering up with hit social media app TikTok, TeamLab now presents a new exhibition where folks can enjoy TeamLab’s beautiful, otherworldly art while sweating in the steamy, hot bellows of a sauna.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on artnet news, Jan 21, 2021

Does Instagram Stress You Out? Experience-Art Collective teamLab Has Made a Flowers-Only Alternative Designed to Delight

With this in mind, last fall, the global art collective teamLab conceived Flowers Bombing Home, an interactive art project in which you can use your television to stream montages of brightly colored flowers from teamLab’s YouTube livestream. Many of the images are made by other artists, and, in fact, everyone can submit their own creations using the collective’s templates. We spoke with teamLab about the project, how it’s been received, and what’s next for the collective in 2021.(Excerpt from the text)

[Feature] When art meets technology

With this in mind, last fall, the global art collective teamLab conceived Flowers Bombing Home, an interactive art project in which you can use your television to stream montages of brightly colored flowers from teamLab’s YouTube livestream. Many of the images are made by other artists, and, in fact, everyone can submit their own creations using the collective’s templates. We spoke with teamLab about the project, how it’s been received, and what’s next for the collective in 2021.(Excerpt from the text)

Miami opens new art center with boundary-breaking exhibitions

With this in mind, last fall, the global art collective teamLab conceived Flowers Bombing Home, an interactive art project in which you can use your television to stream montages of brightly colored flowers from teamLab’s YouTube livestream. Many of the images are made by other artists, and, in fact, everyone can submit their own creations using the collective’s templates. We spoke with teamLab about the project, how it’s been received, and what’s next for the collective in 2021.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on The New York Times, Jan 10, 2021

Entrepreneurs Bet Big on Immersive Art Despite Covid-19

Entering what was already a crowded market for companies specializing in experiential art, Superblue had plans to dominate the field with installations by experimental artists like Nick Cave, James Turrell, Es Devlin and teamLab. But the multimillion-dollar venture in Miami stalled before it started; the city’s surge in coronavirus cases forced Superblue to postpone its anticipated opening from December to March. Unfazed by the delays, the company says that it has attracted stronger interest from investors and is planning for two additional centers in unnamed cities.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on PENTA, Jan 6, 2021

https://cms-dotart.teamlab.art/admin/presses/en/edit/11618

The Miami show, titled “Every Wall Is a Door,” was originally scheduled to open on Dec. 22, but was postponed until “early spring.” It will feature works by James Turrell, “the father of experiential art, in our minds,” Dent-Brocklehurst says, as well as teamLab, a group out of Tokyo that is probably the most well-known in the field of experiential art. Also featured will be Es Devlin, who is breaking into the field, “but who is brilliant and incredibly thoughtful,” she says.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on Art in America, Jan 4, 2021

THE BLOCKBUSTER AVANT-GARDE

Visitors to teamLab Planets, an art venue in Tokyo run by the eponymous art collective, can wade in a knee-deep pool of water, where images of koi fish projected onto the water’s surface dart around their legs, leaving trails of multicolored light in their wakes. Reach down to cup a koi, and it bursts into flowers—cherry blossoms in the spring, sunflowers in the summer—that scatter in the pool. (Excerpt from the text)