teamLab's Digital Flower Installation Blooms at Kumu Art Museum in Tallinn
The Japanese collective teamLab, renowned for its immersive multimedia installations, has opened a new exhibition at the Kumu Art Museum in Tallinn, Estonia, running until May 7. Titled "Impermanent Flowers Floating in a Continuous Sea," the installation transforms the museum's grand hall into a digital ecosystem where flowers bloom and wither in response to visitor touch. The exhibition features large-scale animations of waves and plants, exploring themes of life and death through digital 3D visuals. Meanwhile, teamLab continues other projects, including a collaboration with Bulgari at the Bulgari Ginza Tower in Tokyo, where an interactive serpent changes color, and the upcoming inauguration of teamLab Massless in Beijing—a 10,000-square-meter museum housing over forty installations. The Beijing venue aims to replicate the success of teamLab's Tokyo museum, which holds a Guinness World Record as the most visited museum dedicated to a single artist.
Key facts
- teamLab's exhibition at Kumu Art Museum in Tallinn runs until May 7
- The installation is titled 'Impermanent Flowers Floating in a Continuous Sea'
- The work features digital flowers that bloom and die based on visitor interaction
- teamLab is collaborating with Bulgari on an interactive serpent at Bulgari Ginza Tower in Tokyo
- teamLab Massless, a new 10,000-square-meter museum in Beijing, will open soon
- The Beijing museum will feature over forty installations from teamLab's career
- teamLab's Tokyo museum holds a Guinness World Record for most visited single-artist museum
- The collective was formed in 2001 and includes engineers, programmers, and animators
Entities
Artists
- teamLab
Institutions
- Kumu Art Museum
- Bulgari
- Bulgari Ginza Tower
- teamLab Massless
- teamLab Tokyo
Locations
- Tallinn
- Estonia
- Tokyo
- Japan
- Beijing
- China