What’s being billed as the world’s first all-digital museum is part art gallery, part amusement park and for some, part haunted house.
Some things typically found in an art museum are missing: There are no guide maps, no descriptions, and no signs warning viewers to keep their hands off the art work. In fact, there are no works of art — in the usual sense of paintings or objects behind glass cases.
Mori Building Digital Art Museum in Tokyo.
Without all the lights, the museum space would be a bunch of empty halls with black walls and carpeted floors.
Inside the Mori Building Digital Art Museum.
“Each visitor can enjoy this experience in their own way,” said Ou Sugiyama, who heads the museum. “The title of the exhibit is ‘Borderless’ and it’s meant to signify how the immersive works keep boundaries between visitors in a state of continuous flux.”
Owing to projection-mapping technology, the artworks react to movement and touch, inviting museum-goers to imagine they possess new superpowers.
“With the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics coming up we wanted to offer the world something unique, making our city even more magnetic,” Sugiyama added.
A digital installation at the Mori Building Digital Art Museum.
Art Comes To Life
In a room called the “Forest of Lamps,” hundreds of lamps hang at different heights over a mirrored floor. When visitors enter the space, light spreads from lamp to lamp, like fire. Before you know it, the entire room becomes a single color. With eerie music filling whatever void remains, the experience starts to feel otherworldly.
If you like the ocean, visitors are invited to draw marine animals with crayons on pieces of paper, then lay them down on a scanner. In a matter of seconds, the drawings appear on the wall and start swimming with other sea life. If you try to catch your fish, it scurries away.
Other artworks explore nature and the cycle of life. Walking from one installation to another, frogs and lizards appear. One wrong step and you squash them.
Tea Time
After visitors exhaust themselves, the EN Tea House awaits. For an extra 500 yen ($4.50), you can drink the art. A server pours tea into a cup — give it a few seconds and a flower blooms in the teacup; different flowers open up as long as there is tea left.
The MORI Building Digital Art Museum is housed at Odaiba Palette town on the Rinkai line and the Yurikamome tram line. Tickets are 3,200 yen ($29) for adults and 1,000 yen ($9) for children.
www.bloomberg.com