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)
For one of its latest projects, teamLab presents its Digitized Fukuyama Castle exhibition at a historic fortress located in Fukuyama, Hiroshima. Initially built in 1622 at the beginning of the Edo period as the last large-scale castle of its time, Fukuyama Castle is designated as one of Japan’s National Treasures. The original castle was demolished due to air raids during the Second World War and was later reconstructed with distinct features including restored iron paneling which is said to be the only one of its kind in the country.(Excerpt from the text)
After being cooped up inside during the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us are itching to leave home. While some people might want to take a trip to a faraway destination or eat at a new restaurant, many art lovers just want to visit a museum or a gallery. There’s nothing like seeing art in person: You can step towards a painting and move away from it. Then, you can pause to place your hand on your chin quizzically as you stop to think about how the brushstrokes fit together and why the artist chose to apply colors to a surface in a particular way. (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)
TeamLab’s latest venture, Tea Time in the Soy Sauce Storehouse, is set in the Fukuoka Soy Sauce Gallery, a historic former soy sauce warehouse in Okayama City of Okayama Prefecture. Within its shadowy spaces TeamLab has set a host of lamps afloat in the inky blackness, creating an eerie and beautiful backdrop that you yourself can influence with your actions.(Excerpt from the text)
FEELING a little like Alice in Wonderland as gigantic digital images of red, white and cream-coloured dahlias budded, bloomed and shattered on the wall in front of me, I dithered over what I was witnessing. Is this a forward step in the march of modernism or a debasement of art into theme park entertainment? (Excerpt from the text)
Whether sprawling across a Tokyo warehouse, taking over a Japanese castle, turning old oil tanks into waterfalls or even popping up in Melbourne, the digital art made by creative collective Teamlab can make you feel like you're in another world. That's a sensation we could all after the past year year, even if visiting the group's overseas sites is currently off limits due to international travel restrictions. Enter Teamlab's latest project: the online-only Sakura Bombing Home. (Excerpt from the text)
Feeling a little like Alice in Wonderland as gigantic digital images of red, white and cream-colored dahlias budded, bloomed and shattered on the wall in front of me, I dithered over what I was witnessing. Is this a forward step in the march of modernism or a debasement of art into theme-park entertainment?
The dazzling floral extravaganza by teamLab, a digital art collective based in Tokyo, is the dynamic centerpiece of an inaugural exhibition at Superblue, a Miami “experiential art center" (or an E.A.C. to initiates) that begins invitational previews next week before opening to the public on April 22. Backed by the juggernaut Pace Gallery and Laurene Powell Jobs’s Emerson Collective, Superblue is the blue-chip contestant in the rapidly growing field of immersive art.(Excerpt from the text)
The teamLab Reconnect: Art with Rinkan Sauna Roppongi offers visitors a chance to sit in a sauna, take a cold shower, enjoy art and repeat.
A preview of the immersive event was held in Minato Ward, Tokyo, on Monday, ahead of the official opening on March 22.(Excerpt from the text)
Anyone even remotely tapped into social media will have some awareness of teamLab and its out-of-this-world art displays and installations. Beautiful, all-encompassing and unique, the group’s work is something to be experienced rather than merely seen.
Founded in 2001 by Toshiyuki Inoko, teamLab calls itself an international art collective. It’s an interdisciplinary group of specialists – programmers, artists, engineers, mathematicians, CG animators and architects – whose works explore the convergence of art, technology, design and the natural world through the digital medium. (Excerpt from the text)
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