teamLab: A Forest Where Gods Live, Ruins and Heritage - THE NATURE OF TIME | teamLab

メイン画像
ロゴ画像
EXPOSIÇÃO PASSADA
2019.07.25(Thu) - 12.08(Sun)Mifuneyama Rakuen, Takeo Hot Springs, Kyushu
メイン画像
ロゴ画像
EXPOSIÇÃO PASSADA
2019.07.25(Thu) - 12.08(Sun)Mifuneyama Rakuen, Takeo Hot Springs, Kyushu

A Place where Varying Space - Times Intersect

The 500,000 square meter Mifuneyama Rakuen Park was created in 1845, during the end of the Edo period. Sitting on the borderline of the park is the 3,000-year-old sacred Okusu tree of Takeo Shrine, which is Japan’s 7th largest. Also in the heart of the garden is another 300-year-old sacred tree. Knowing the significance of this, our forebears turned a portion of this forest into a garden, utilizing the trees of the natural forest. The border between the garden and the wild forest is ambiguous, and when wandering through the garden, before they know it, people will find themselves entering the woods and animal trails.

Within the forest, there is an enormous megalith, almost supernatural in its formation, known as an iwakura (a dwelling place of a god in ancient Japanese nature worship, or “animism”) that has been preserved as a small shrine. Around the 7th century, a sorcerer named En-no-gyouza-ozunu carved a 23m tall figure over the entire surface of a sheer cliff on Mount Mifuneyama. And 1300 years ago, the priest Gyoki, who created the Great Buddha in Nara, came to Mifuneyama, carved 500 Arhats and Buddha figures directly onto the rock face of the caves within the forest, which remain to this day. On the edge of the forest, the stone gate of Tsuzaki Castle and other ruins remain within and along the borderline of the forest.

We exist as a part of an eternal continuity of life and death, a process which has been continuing for an overwhelmingly long time. It is hard for us, however, to sense this in our everyday lives, perhaps because humans can not recognize time longer than their own lives. There is a boundary in our understanding of the continuity of time.

The forest is home to 3,000-year-old trees, and it changes daily with the imperceptible, slow flow of time, repeating every year, as a space where the endlessly long time accumulates. The ruins from ages past scattered in the forest and the Edo-period garden which remains today each have their own respective space-times. The bath house in the garden was constructed in modern times, but after just a short period, it was abandoned, becoming a space where time had stopped completely.

Within the space of the ruins of Mifuneyama Rakuen, we make artworks with their own, separate space-times, thereby creating a place where these varying spaces intersect and overlap, allowing us to transcend the boundary in our understanding of the continuity of time.

teamLab

OBRAS

Megaliths in the Bath House Ruins

Masses (Megaliths) of different space-times are clustered in the bath house ruins.The forest surrounding the bath house ruins is home to 3,000-year-old trees, and it changes daily with the imperceptible, slow flow of time, repeating every year, as a space where the endlessly long time accumulates. The ruins from ages past scattered in the forest and the Edo-period garden which remains today each have their own respective space-times. The bath house was made in modern times, but after just a short period, it was abandoned, becoming a space-time where time had stopped completely. And this group of megaliths is also a mass made up of compressed space-times where the flow of time varies. Here, various space-times intersect and overlap.
Each megalith is surrounded by similarly standing megaliths, the space-times of which are all connected. 
The artwork is continuously rendered in real time by a computer program. It is neither prerecorded, nor on loop. As a whole, previous states never recur, and the artwork is continuously changing due to the movement of people. Every moment is unique and can never be seen again.
The following artworks exist in the artwork space of the three-dimensional objects grouped in these bath house ruins.
・Flowers and PeopleThis artwork is in a state of continuous change. Over a period of one hour, a year’s worth of seasonal flowers blossoms and scatters. The flowers bud, grow, and blossom before their petals begin to wither and eventually fade away. The cycle of growth and decay repeats itself in perpetuity. If a person stays still, the flowers surrounding them grow and bloom more abundantly.
・Universe of Water Particles When people approach the artwork, the flow of the water changes. The movement of people influences the artwork, causing it to evolve continuously, while the artwork influences other works. For instance, the water causes the flowers in the work Flowers and People to scatter.
Water is represented by a continuum of numerous water particles. The interaction between the particles is calculated and then lines are drawn in relation to the behavior of the water particles. The lines are “flattened” using what teamLab considers to be ultrasubjective space.

EN TEA House OTORO

Forest and Spiral of Resonating Lamps - One Stroke, Autumn Mountain

Before the modern era in Japan, Kasane no Irome (nuances of layered colors) were seasonal colors created in silk. The complicated colors were the result of a combination of front and back colors (silk at the time was so thin that the liner was transparent, creating more nuanced colors), overlapping color gradations, complex weave colors, and combinations of warp and weft.
When a person stands still close to a lamp, it shines brightly and emits a color that resonates out. The light of this lamp becomes the starting point, and it spreads to the two nearest lamps. The light from the two nearest lamps transmits the same color to other lamps, one after another, spreading out continuously. The light transmitted from the lamp always resonates out as a bright light once, passing to close lamps, until all of the lamps have shone brightly once, and then returns to the first lamp. The light of the lamp in response to human interaction, divides in two, becomes one optical line through all of the lamps respectively, before finally, returning to the first lamp that was the starting point. People become aware of the presence of others in the same space.
All the lamps, seemingly scattered randomly, have a single connecting line (unicursal) that can be drawn. When drawing a line, the stroke (the same starting and ending points) is drawn from a lamp to the lamp that is the closest in distance in three-dimensions. By arranging the lamps in this way, the light of the lamp corresponding to the person is always propagated to the nearest lamp, and must always pass through all the lamps in the space in a single stroke, before finally returning to the first lamp that was its origin.
The arrangement of the lamps is mathematically determined to satisfy a number of restrictions outlined below. A large number of solutions were evaluated that take into account the variation and distribution in the height, the direction of the lamps, and the smoothness of the three-dimensional path (light trajectory).
The hanging lamps are arranged uniformly, in such a way that they form an orderly grid. This is the first constraint. The second constraint is that of the boundaries of the physical space: the distance between the floor and the ceiling, and the height and the width of the passages through which people can move. And the third constraint is that when a line is drawn from any lamp to another lamp in three dimensions, the starting point and the ending point must be connected as a single line (unicursal).
Since the arrangement of the lamps born from such a process seems to be random at first sight, the trajectory of the resonating light cannot be predicted: the light continues to the lamp that is physically closest, thus giving a natural feeling - like a fire burning. And since the light trajectory of the lamps is connected by a single line, the light born from any particular lamp and the light born from any other lamp will always cross each other.
The arrangement of the lamps is not only beautiful in a static way, but also in a dynamic way when activated by people in the space. It demonstrates the space of a new era that can be designed freely and change itself through digital technology, a space that adapts and changes due to the movement of the people in it. 
※The lamp are made of Murano glass (Venetian glass).

Ruins and Heritage

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Detalhes do local

teamLab: A Forest Where Gods Live, Ruins and Heritage - THE NATURE OF TIME

Duração

2019.07.25(Thu) - 12.08(Sun)

Horas

11:30 - 22:00
* Enter from the park's   Main Entrance. (* located next to souvenir store "Ohajiki")
* Last entry is 30 minutes before closing.
* On view along with the annual  Mifuneyama Rakuen Autumn Leaves Festival.

Fechado

November 5 - 7, 2019

Tickets

* This exhibition is held together with the Autumn Leaves Festival at Mifuneyama Rakuen Park.

* To enter the park, Autumn Leaves Festival ticket (JPY600/adult) is needed.

* To enter teamLab exhibition, teamLab ticket is needed in addition to the Autumn Leaves Festival ticket. 

* Both tickets can only be purchased onsite in cash.

Acesso

Local

Mifuneyama Rakuen
4100 Takeo, Takeo-cho, Takeo City, Saga, Japan
By Train
From JR Hakata Station: 70 min by train to JR Takeo Onsen Station. Take a taxi (5 min) or a bus (8 min) to Mifuneyama Rakuen stop. From JR Takeo Onsen Station: 5 min by taxi or 8 min by bus to Mifuneyama Rakuen stop.
By Air
From Nagasaki Airport: 40 min by car From Saga Airport: 50 min by car From Fukuoka Airport: 70 min by car
Autumn Leaves Festival Parking & Free Shuttle Bus
See here for various parking options and free shuttle bus routes. Free shuttle bus runs daily between parking lots and the park's main entrance.
Free Shuttle Bus from JR Takeo Onsen Station (* Sat, Sun, Holiday only)
During the Autumn Leaves Festival (2019.11.08 - 12.08), free shuttle bus runs between JR Takeo Onsen Station & Mifuneyama Rakuen Park on Sat, Sun, and Holidays. Route: between JR Takeo Onsen Station North Exit & Mifuneyama Rakuen Park Time: 08:00 - 22:00 (3 trips/hr) Ticket: Free (No reservation needed)

CONTACTOS

Inquiry on tickets

Contact the venue

Mifuneyama Rakuen Hotel +81-954-23-3131

Anotações

Regarding Entry
Entry may be restricted depending on crowds.
Due to time constraints, if the number of visitors exceeds capacity, entry may not be permitted.

Wheelchair & Stroller Access
The garden has natural trails that may be difficult to access with a wheelchair or stroller.

Accessible artworks include;

At "teamLab: A Forest Where Gods Live" exhibition:
・"Drawing on the Water Surface Created by the Dance of Koi and Boats – Mifuneyama Rakuen Pond"
・"Floating Resonating Lamps - One Stroke"
・"Resonating Forest in the Ravine"
・"Resonating Forest - Cherry Blossoms and Maple"
・"Resonating Azalea Valley "
・"Resonating Mt. Mifuneyama"
・"Ever Blossoming Life Rock"
・"Flowers Bloom in an Infinite Universe inside a Teacup”
・"Forest and Spiral of Resonating Lamps - one stroke"

At "teamLab: A Forest Where Gods Live, Ruins and Heritage" exhibition:
For details on accessible artworks, please contact Mifuneyama Rakuen Hotel (0954-23-3131).

Liability
The organizers will not be held responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to personal items.

Trash Free Park
For environmental preservation, trash cans are not available in this park. Be prepared to take your trash home for disposal and recycling.

No Smoking
All parks and natural areas are strictly smoke and tobacco-free.

Clothing
There are steep slopes and natural trails in this park. Visitors are advised to wear suitable clothing and footwear.

No Pets Allowed
No pets are allowed in the park. Service dogs are welcome.

Exhibition Suspended or Delayed Due to Weather
In case of strong rain and/or wind, the exhibition will be suspended. Please check the park's official website, facebook, or instagram for details.

Photography & Videography
Use of flash, drones and/or tripod inside the park is prohibited.

Other
By entering this exhibition, you consent to having your image captured by official photographers and videographers. The resulting materials, including still photographs, video and audio recordings may be used by the Organizers or local promotional entities without restriction or financial compensation, in news materials, promotional materials, on the web and other properties.
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.

Organizadores

Mifuneyama Rakuen
teamLab

Patrocinadores

Cooperation

Saga Television Station