Recently, the Japanese art group TeamLab has launched a digital museum with great fantasy, great future and technology. This is a complex, unprecedented museum that is driven by 520 computers, 470 projectors and a large number of sensors in a 10,000 square meter space.
According to reports, every corner of the TeamLab pavilion can be covered in every corner, and because of the addition of sensors, the images you see will continue to change with the participation of tourists, such as fish from a room is swimming to another room. Although these images are spliced by different projectors, there is no flaw in the picture you see.
This is an art of combining light and space. The theme of this exhibition is "Borderless". It is hard to imagine what you can see in such a museum.
Walking through the Progress Pavilion, you will immediately be shocked by its open borderless image, and you will immediately devote yourself to a stream of particles, and the colorful petal clusters enhance the overall appreciation.
The museum director Ou Sugiyama told Bloomberg: "The 'borderless' here refers to an immersive experience where visitors can feel the ever-changing dynamic experience. Of course, you can stand and You can walk around in the pavilion." With the 2020 Tokyo Olympics coming, we hope to present something unique to the world and make our city more attractive.
Several scenes of this exhibition include: "Land of the Forest", "Tea House", "Moving Forest", "Future Park" and so on.
In the "Land of the Forest" scene, there are hundreds of lights at different heights, and the floor is a reflective mirror. When you approach, the nearby lights will turn on and the color lights will change automatically when you move faster. The whole room will be full of movement.
"Tea House" is a scene where you can taste matcha. It not only has tea, but also the scene changes will be directly projected to your cup maker, for example, directly projecting the petals, and will automatically disappear when you pick up the cup. There's even an interactive mirror that automatically changes color as you approach, and you can take a colorful, distinctive selfie.
In other scenes, the "Waterfall Flow" is the most intuitive, in which you can not only see the spectacular waterfall, but also explore the life cycle of nature, which is also a scene that TeamLab has shown many times.
"Moving Forest" can be seen as a creative scene where you can climb and understand the concept of the world through the body and three-dimensional thinking of the world, in a complex, physically challenging three-dimensional space. In, let your body immerse in the interactive world.
It is worth noting that there are no tour guides, map guides, and no warning signs such as photographs. The reason is that there is no real physical exhibit in this pavilion. The museum has built-in blank walls and floors. You don't have any damage.
Not only that, you won't even notice the presence of the projector, because these projectors are placed on the top of the pavilion to create an immersive experience. Even, TeamLab wants you to be involved, because these scenes are all linked sensors, and your every move will change its direction.
It is understood that this exhibition is jointly provided by exhibition service provider Mori and hardware solution provider Espon Epson. It is reported that this is also a long-term exhibition hall of TeamLab in Japan. Search for "MORI Building DIGITAL ART MUSEUM: teamLab".
Of course, behind the beautiful visual feast, it requires a lot of electricity costs, and the regular museum tickets are slightly more expensive. TeamLab tickets are 3,200 yen and children's tickets are 1,000 yen. If you have a trip to Japan, you may wish to experience some excursions.
Source: 7tin
http://www.7tin.cn/news/114440.html








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