A sprawling space with many nooks and crannies has been created in the Japanese capital. An ideal place for all photographers or Instagram users, the installations with a thousand kaleidoscope colors will delight fans who “like to get Likes.”

These immersive installations interact in real time with the movements of visitors so that we can have fun in a single room, lost contemplating the colorful forms enveloping us.

What is the name of this unique museum? The Mori Digital Art Museum. It opened its doors in June in Tokyo and it has become one of the first museums in the world dedicated exclusively to digital art.

This vast space, representing nearly 10,000 square meters, is located in the Odaiba district. With 520 computers and some 470 projectors, no less than fifty installations structure the museum. These installations merge, respond and interact with each other but also interact with visitors by detecting their movements.

All the projections were designed by the creative collective TeamLab, renowned for its passion for digital arts. This titanic work contains surrealist digitizations representing moments of serenity, opening flowers, waves breaking on the sand and birds in migration. The very essence of this break in time is to explore the relationships that unite man and nature in the digital age.

As if immersed in a dreamlike labyrinth, visitors enjoy getting lost in the different corridors that connect the spaces. They will be able to walk through 5 distinct parts at the heart of the exhibition, spread over two floors, spaces such as:

  • Bordeless World
  • Athletics Forest
  • Future Park
  • Forest of Lamps
  • In Tea House

Encoded in real time, the installations create a series of changing three-dimensional spaces designed for visitors to engage and explore at their own pace.

The digital world highlighted in an artistic way is an increasingly recurrent topic, but the Mori Digital Art Museum will be the first permanent space for this subject.

For all those who love the work of TeamLab, you can discover other places created by the collective, including a temporary museum called Planets Tokyo, in the Toyosu district, exhibiting their achievements for the next 2 years.