NEWS

Featured on Artlyst, Jun 23, 2026

The Sun and The Moon Saatchi Gallery A Sublime Experience

This is particularly so with the final installations, ‘Massless Suns and Dark Suns’ and ‘Massless Sun and Surface of the Sky’ by teamLab. These immersive works present spheres of light and darkness that appear to take form in space, yet have no physical substance. Shaped by light, environment and perception, they invite reflection on the nature of existence. teamLab’s collaborative practice, which seeks to navigate the confluence of art, science, technology, and the natural world, serves as an exemplar for the approach this exhibition takes as a whole. This is one of seeking to transcend boundaries in our perceptions of the world, of the relationship between the self and the world, and of the continuity of time, seeing everything that exists in a long, fragile yet miraculous, borderless continuity. As such, teamLab’s installations provide an appropriate and wonder-filled conclusion to a sublime show that focuses on the sublime.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on la Repubblica, Jun 08, 2026

The Saatchi Gallery pays tribute to the Sun and the Moon through an exhibition that celebrates human creativity(Original text: Spanish)

The final galleries, Midnight and The Darkest Hours, immerse visitors in realms of folklore, dreams, and perception. Here, works by renowned artists such as Paula Rego and Joan Miró culminate in two immersive installations by the international art collective teamLab. Part of teamLab’s “Cognitive Sculpture” series, these works challenge traditional notions of art’s physical existence by creating experiences that can only be fully encountered in person.(Excerpt from the original Spanish text)

Featured on Euronews, Jun 08, 2026

The Sun and the Moon: Saatchi Gallery's ambitious new summer show turns its gaze to the sky

The final galleries, Midnight and The Darkest Hours, descend fully into the realms of folklore, dreams and perception. Here, works by renowned artists including Paula Rego and Joan Miró culminate in two stunning immersive installations by the internationally acclaimed art collective teamLab. Both works are part of their "Cognitive Sculpture" series. "It is quite hard to explain in words. The best way is to be inside the space," says the global brand director of teamLab, Takashi Kudo.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on LONDONIST, May 29, 2026

The Top Exhibitions To See In London: June 2026

Saatchi Gallery's exhibition unfolds as a journey through a complete 24-hour cycle, moving from dawn through daylight to the depths of the night, with each gallery representing a different time of day. It includes historical works by Joan Miro and Joseph Wright of Derby, through to contemporary artists. Highlights include Luke Jerram's Helios, a glowing six-metre replica of the sun based on NASA photography, and an interactive work by TeamLab. (Excerpt from the text)

Featured on Blooloop, Apr 09, 2026

How teamLab cast its spell on Abu Dhabi

Inside the new teamLab Phenomena attraction in the Saadiyat Cultural District Called teamLab Phenomena, the silvery structure is perched right on the coast of a sandy man-made island. The beguilingly beautiful building looks like a beached spaceship with its wavy walls and sweeping staircase leading to a circular central entrance. It is the first-ever building purpose-built for teamLab, and the group has made the most of its 17,000 square metres.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on Time Out Tokyo, Apr 03, 2026

6 of the world’s 100 most visited art museums are in Tokyo

But the National Museum can’t rest on its laurels if it’s to hold on to the No 1 spot, as teamLab Planets, No 24 on the global list, is already threatening to overtake the Ueno oldie. The digital-art depository in Toyosu welcomed 2,516,719 guests in 2025, a year that saw the museum unveil 20 new works. Among the standout pieces is ‘Catching Collecting Extinct Forest’, a dazzling, rainbow-hued world where long-gone animals roam. The museum even has an outpost of a Kyoto-based Bib Gourmand ramen joint.(Excerpt from the text)

Featured on Business Insider, Mar 31, 2026

I thought this Tokyo museum would be a major tourist trap. It ended up being a highlight of my first trip to Japan.

TeamLab Planets quickly made a name for itself after opening its doors in 2018. It holds the Guinness World Record for the most-visited museum dedicated to a single group or artist, bringing in more than 2.5 million visitors from April 2023 to March 2024. A popular second location in Tokyo, known as teamLab Borderless, focuses on digital art. Both museums were launched by teamLab, an international art collective that includes artists, animators, engineers, mathematicians, and architects among its specialists. Together, they work to "explore the relationship between the self and the world," according to the museum's website, although global brand director Takashi Kudo said they have an even bigger goal.(Excerpt from the text)