The Citizen (KZN)

Lose your senses, self in this museum

- AFP

Tokyo – It’s immersive, interactiv­e and, of course, Instagramm­able – and now the digital art of Japanese collective teamLab, a major tourist draw, has a new home in the country’s tallest skyscraper.

A shifting vortex of spotlights and a mirror room filled with ethereal “wobbling” orbs are among the new artworks at the “teamLab Borderless” permanent exhibition, which opens on Friday.

They join dozens of other mesmerisin­g displays, from waterfalls of light to birds leaving colourful trails as they dart by, in a labyrinthi­ne display at the 325m Azabudai Hills building in central Tokyo.

“Our goal is to touch people and to prompt them to reflect on life and the world in a more positive way,” said Toshiyuki Inoko, director of the internatio­nally renowned teamLab collective.

“Our work is the continuati­on of our past endeavours, but offers a whole new experience at the same time.”

Visitors to the attraction at Azabudai Hills, which has towered over central Tokyo since its completion last year, are free to wander through the complex of artworks that combine projection and sound.

Some displays move from room to room and others react to visitors’ movements, with petals scattering as they approach and fluid lights rippling at their feet.

The exhibition has more than 50 artworks, featuring a mix of natural and otherworld­ly motifs, from slow-blooming flowers to a vast room of cables through which digital light appears to rain down.

Many of the exhibits were shown at the previous incarnatio­n of “teamLab Borderless” in Tokyo Bay, which was open from 2018 to 2022.

Visited by stars including Will Smith and Kim Kardashian, it holds the Guinness World Record for the most visited museum dedicated to a single art group, with nearly 2.2 million admissions in 2019.

As well as visual and auditory pleasures, the installati­ons at the new “teamLab Borderless” also appeal to the senses of smell and taste, with green tea and ice cream served under special table projection­s.

Humans “perceive the world with their body, but these days our perception of the world is often through the internet, or television”, Inoko said.

“So, we wanted to create an experience” that appealed to all senses, he added.

The exhibition is poised to take advantage of a recent boom in tourism to Japan, with visitor numbers hitting a record high in December. –

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