teamLab Islands Dance! Art Museum and Learn & Play! Future Parks in NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM | teamLab

メイン画像
teamLab Islands Dance! Art Museum and Learn & Play! Future Parks in NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM
PAST EXHIBITION
Nov 12, 2016 - Feb 12, 2017NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM, Nagoya
メイン画像
teamLab Islands Dance! Art Museum and Learn & Play! Future Parks in NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM
PAST EXHIBITION
Nov 12, 2016 - Feb 12, 2017NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM, Nagoya

ARTWORKS

Flowers and People, Cannot be Controlled but Live Together – A Whole Year per Hour

The seasons co-exist and change gradually across the installation space.
Flowers blossom according to the seasons, and the places where they grow gradually change.

The flowers bud, grow, and blossom before they begin to wither and their petals eventually scatter, repeating the cycle of life and death in perpetuity. If a person stays still, the flowers surrounding them grow and bloom more abundantly than usual, but if people touch or step on the flowers, they shed their petals, wither, and die all at once. Sometimes the flowers cross the boundaries of other works and bloom in other spaces, but scatter or die due to the influence of other works.

The artwork is not a pre-recorded image that is played back; it is created by a computer program that continuously renders the work in real time. The interaction between people and the installation causes continuous change in the artwork, so previous visual states can never be replicated, and will never reoccur. The picture at this moment can never be seen again.

In spring in the Kunisaki Peninsula, there are many cherry blossoms in the mountains and canola blossoms at their base. A visit to this region led teamLab to wonder how much of these flowers were planted by people and how much of them were native to the environment. It was a place of great serenity and contentment. The expansive body of flowers is an ecosystem influenced by human intervention, and the boundary between the work of nature and the work of humans is unclear. Rather than nature and humans being in conflict, a healthy ecosystem is one that includes people. In the past, people understood that they could not grasp nature in its entirety, and that it is not possible to control nature. People lived more closely aligned to the rule of nature, which perhaps created a comfortable natural environment. We believe that these valleys hold faint traces of this premodern relationship with nature that once existed, and we hope to explore a form of human intervention based on the premise that nature cannot be controlled.

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Venue Details

teamLab Islands Dance! Art Museum and Learn & Play! Future Parks in NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM

Term

Nov 12, 2016 - Feb 12, 2017

Holding period

November 12, 2016 (Sat) to February 12, 2017 (Sun)

Location

NAGOYA CITY SCIENCE MUSEUM
2-17-1 Sakae, Nagoya City, Aichi

Closing day

Every Monday, the other by a closed day calendar of the Nagoya City Science Museum


Holding time

9:30 to 17:00 (last accepted 16:30)

Price

800 yen Small-junior high school students 500 yen General 1,400 yen high school, college students

Organizers

teamLab Islands Dance! Art Museum and Learn & Play! Future Parks  Nagoya Executive Committee

Sponsors

Pentel Co., Ltd.
ARTIST
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teamLab
teamLab (f. 2001) is an international art collective. Their collaborative practice seeks to navigate the confluence of art, science, technology, and the natural world. Through art, the interdisciplinary group of specialists, including artists, programmers, engineers, CG animators, mathematicians, and architects, aims to explore the relationship between the self and the world, and new forms of perception. In order to understand the world around them, people separate it into independent entities with perceived boundaries between them. teamLab seeks to transcend these boundaries in our perceptions of the world, of the relationship between the self and the world, and of the continuity of time. Everything exists in a long, fragile yet miraculous, borderless continuity. teamLab’s works are in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide; National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Amos Rex, Helsinki; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Asian Art Museum, San Francisco; Borusan Contemporary Art Collection, Istanbul; and Asia Society Museum, New York, among others. teamlab.art Biographical Documents teamLab is represented by Pace Gallery, Martin Browne Contemporary and Ikkan Art.