teamLab: Digitized Kairakuen Garden | teamLab

teamLab: Digitized Kairakuen Garden

Kairakuen Garden was created at the end of the Edo Period (1842), incorporating the surrounding scenery into its composition. The garden was designated as a Special Place of Scenic Beauty and is considered to be one of the Three Great Gardens of Japan alongside Kenrokuen Garden in Kanazawa and Korakuen Garden in Okayama. Kairakuen Garden is home to 3,000 plum trees of around 100 varieties, and it is well known for its plum blossoms. Because of this wide variety of trees, the plum blossoms bloom over a longer period of time.

teamLab’s art project Digitized Nature explores how nature can become art. The concept of the project is that non-material digital technology can turn nature into art without harming it.

Humans cannot recognize time longer than their own lifespans. In other words, there is a boundary in our understanding of the long continuity of time.
The forms and shapes of nature have been created over many years and have been molded by the interactions between people and nature. We can perceive this long duration of time in these shapes of nature themselves. By using the shapes, we believe we can explore the boundary in our perception of the long continuity of time.

teamLab: Digitized Kairakuen Garden will transform this garden, where various types of plum trees bloom in spring, into an interactive art space that changes due to the presence of people.

OPERE

Ever Blossoming Life Tree - Fallen Jiro Cedar

Flowers bloom and scatter for eternity in the decaying cavity inside the trunk of a large tree that fell due to a strong typhoon (1964). A year’s worth of seasonal flowers from the area bloom over the course of an hour, continuously scattering and changing. Flowers are born, grow, bud, bloom, and eventually scatter, wither, and disappear. The flowers are in a continuous cycle of life and death, repeating forever.
Kairakuen Garden's giant cedar forest, created in the late Edo period (1842), changes daily with the imperceptibly slow flow of time, repeating every year. It is a space where endlessly long time accumulates. This giant cedar tree was probably here before the landscaping. After it fell, the tree’s cavity became a space where time has stopped. The flowers that repeat the cycle of life and death also have a different flow of time. Here, various space-times intersect and overlap.
Our own existence is part of this continuity of life and death, repeating endlessly for an overwhelming length of time, for billions of years. However, it is difficult to perceive this in everyday life. People are unable to perceive periods of time longer than their own lives. There is a cognitive boundary in people’s recognition of the continuity of time.
The eternal birth and death of the flowers in the hollow of the fallen tree that formed over an overwhelmingly long period of time and is beyond the boundaries of our cognition for long-term continuity, may allow us to realize that the existence of life itself is part of a continuous cycle of life and death.
The artwork is not a pre-recorded image that is played back; it is created by a computer program that continuously renders the artwork in real time. As a whole, it is continuously changing, and previous visual states are never replicated. The artwork at this moment can never be seen again.

Ever Blossoming Life Tree - Giant Taro Cedar

Flowers bloom and scatter for eternity on a giant tree (about 35m in height and 17.2m around the roots), which is said to be around 800 years old. A year’s worth of seasonal flowers from the area bloom over the course of an hour, continuously scattering and changing. Flowers are born, grow, bud, bloom, and eventually scatter, wither, and disappear. The flowers are in a continuous cycle of life and death, repeating forever.
Kairakuen Garden's giant cedar forest, created in the late Edo period (1842), changes daily with the imperceptibly slow flow of time, repeating every year. It is a space where endlessly long time accumulates. The giant cedar tree was probably here before the landscaping. The flowers that repeat the cycle of life and death have a different flow of time. Here, various space-times intersect and overlap.
Our own existence is part of this continuity of life and death, repeating endlessly, for an overwhelming length of time, for billions of years. However, it is difficult to perceive this in everyday life.
The eternal birth and death of the flowers on the giant tree that formed over an overwhelmingly long period of time and is beyond the boundaries of our cognition for long-term continuity, may allow us to realize that the existence of life itself is part of a continuous cycle of life and death.
The artwork is not a pre-recorded image that is played back; it is created by a computer program that continuously renders the artwork in real time. As a whole, it is continuously changing, and previous visual states are never replicated. The artwork at this moment can never be seen again.

VISITA

Informazioni sulla Sede

teamLab: Digitized Kairakuen Garden

Durata

2021.3.1(Mon) - 4.4(Sun)

Orari

18:00 - 20:30 (Last entry at 20:00) * Tentative

Accesso

Sede

Kairakuen Garden
1 Chome, Tokiwacho, Mito, Ibaraki
- There are two entrances to this exhibition: the East Gate and the Togyokusen Ticket counter. Front Gate and South Gate are closed during the exhibition period.

Indirizzo nella lingua locale:

茨城県水戸市常磐町1丁目
By Car
Approximately 20-minute drive from Mito Expressway Exit / South Mito Expressway Exit / Ibaraki East Street Expressway Exit * Please use public transportation during the Mito Ume Festival. The parking lots and surrounding roads will be very busy.
By Train
Approximately 20-minute by bus from the north exit of Mito Station.
By Bus
Approximately 20-minute bus ride from Mito Station (North Exit)

CONTATTI

Phone number

Ibaraki Broadcast System, Event division
+81-29-243-4111(Weekdays 10:00 - 17:30)

Le nota

- Please note that visitors from areas under the government-declared state of emergency are not permitted entry. (You may be asked to present a document verifying your address.)
- Please note that there are areas that are inaccessible to guests with disabilities using wheelchairs, guests using strollers, etc.
- In case of strong rain with strong wind, the exhibition will be suspended.

- There are two entrances to this exhibition: the East Gate and the Togyokusen Ticket counter. Please go around the space, then return to the same gate to leave. If you leave through the other gate, you will not be able to see all of the artworks.



ARTISTA
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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.

Gli Organizzatore

Ibaraki Broadcast System, Event division

Gli Sostenitori

Ibaraki Prefectural Government, Mito City, IbarakiPrefecturalTourism&Local Products Association