New Asian Art | teamLab

メイン画像
New Asian Art
2025.9.13(Sat) - 2027.4.18(Sun)National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Group Exhibition

メイン画像
New Asian Art
2025.9.13(Sat) - 2027.4.18(Sun)National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Group Exhibition

Opere

Black Waves

All oceans are connected to each other, and so are all the waves in this world.

In classical East Asian art, waves are often expressed using a combination of lines. These waves created by lines allow us to realize that each wave is one part of a larger flow, and conveys life as though the waves are a living entity.

When the waves rise, we can feel a powerful breath of life, as though life is blooming. It feels as though each wave has a life of its own. But when the waves collapse and disappear, we realize, with a sense of fragility, that they were a part of the ocean. And that ocean is connected to all of the other oceans. In other words, all of the waves in the world are connected to each other.
The waves seem alive because life is like a rising wave. It is a miraculous phenomenon that continuously emerges from a single, continuous ocean.

The waves are expressed through a continuous body of countless water particles. The interactions of particles are calculated, and then the movement of water is simulated in three-dimensional space. Lines are created along the trajectories of the water particles, and drawn on the surface layer of the three-dimensional waves.

The lines are created with what teamLab refers to as Ultrasubjective Space. In contrast to space that is created through, or cut out by, lenses and perspective, Ultrasubjective Space does not fix the viewer’s viewpoint and in turn frees the body. The wall that the waves are seen on does not become a boundary between the viewer and the artwork, and the artwork space is continuous with the space of the viewer’s body.
Su 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.
New Asian Art
his exhibition highlights recent acquisitions by artists from across Asia and the Asian diaspora in a range of media including paintings, prints, textiles, video, photography and multidisciplinary installation. The display illustrates the diversity of artistic practice in the region through a range of works dating from 1860 to 2016.
Featuring works by artists drawn from the national collection, highlights include modern nihonga (Japanese paintings), contemporary photographs by Chinese and Korean artists, and textiles from Indonesia. Artists include Korakrit Arunanondchai (Thailand); Song Dong, Hong Hao, Yang Fudong, Wang Qingsong (China); Issey Miyake (Japan) with Cai Guo-Qiang (China), Yasamasa Morimura and Nobuyoshi Araki (Japan) and Tim Hawkinson (USA); Jangarh Singh Shyam (India); Nikki S. Lee, Jungjin Lee (South Korea); teamLab, Miwa Yanagi, Tamako Kataoka, Shinmei Kato, Shiko (Japan); and Welmince Rede, Pacik, Kurampet, Warlik (Indonesia).

Visita

Informazioni sulla Sede

New Asian Art

Durata

2025.9.13(Sat) - 2027.4.18(Sun)

Orari

10:00 - 17:00

Chiuso

Christmas Day

Tassa di Ammissione

Free

Accesso

Sede

National Gallery of Australia
Level 2, Galleries 19 & 20

Parkes Place, Parkes, Kamberri/Canberra ACT 2600

Contatti