Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 1/26/2024
Exhibitions by the art collective teamLab are a smash hit. The interactive, walkable installations allow visitors to become part of the works. What makes this art form so effective?

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00 TeamLab Borderless is less of a place you visit and more of a place you experience.
00:08 The museum in Tokyo, curated by the collective TeamLab, showcases digital art.
00:14 Instead of standing in front of the works, guests are invited to step inside them.
00:19 The immersive installation Bubble Universe comes to life as you move around.
00:24 The physical experience is an expression of the artist's concept and philosophy.
00:35 People tend to perceive the world as having independent entities which exist independently.
00:44 With TeamLab Borderless, we want to create an experience through the artworks, where
00:50 the world is continuous and where the continuity of the world itself is felt as beautiful.
01:00 This three-dimensional artwork is made up of spheres that generate light according to
01:05 movements.
01:06 As a person moves closer to a sphere, the bubble will shine brightly and the light will
01:11 spread to the nearest bubble, interacting with light started by other movements.
01:16 As a result of the technology, viewers aren't just observers, they become contributors to
01:22 the artwork itself.
01:28 I think that a space where the existence of other people changes the artwork, and that
01:33 creates some sort of change for you.
01:37 That reciprocal relationship between you and the artwork and other people can create an
01:42 experience where people can further feel the sense of continuity.
01:49 In their Tokyo studio, TeamLab artists are designing new immersive creations.
01:54 It's a diverse team that likes to experiment with new ways of making art.
01:59 With TeamLab, it's a group of specialists.
02:02 We are hardware engineers, software engineers, and CG animators, and architects, mathematicians
02:11 for this, you know, like algorithms, and it's a different type of this, programmers, and
02:16 it's botanists.
02:17 We use all these different medias, monitors, projectors, LEDs, robotics, whatever.
02:25 We try to create some things.
02:29 TeamLab isn't the only player in the immersive art scene.
02:35 More and more artists, galleries, and cultural institutions are developing immersive art
02:39 projects, like these installations by Japanese photographer Mika Ninagawa.
02:47 So why does immersive art appeal to so many people?
02:52 I think today more than ever, we are kind of lazier in a certain way when it comes to
02:59 art, so we don't want to make that effort of contemplation, of dialogue, and so with
03:06 the traditional art form, it's up to us to go to the artwork.
03:10 While in this kind of immersive spectacle, it's the artwork that comes to us, that immersed
03:16 us.
03:17 The second reason, which is a more recent reason, I would say, it's social media.
03:24 These works are highly Instagrammable.
03:27 And also there's a third reason to that, which is also contextual.
03:31 I think it's COVID, because we were so deprived of any sensorial experience, of real life
03:38 experience.
03:39 Everything happened on a screen.
03:40 It's all flat.
03:41 So I think we all needed to get out to experience with our full body.

Recommended