Art workInstallationMovie
Sculpture Without Mass or Form
2020 ~
00:01:24
7 days remaining
teamLab, 2020-, Installation, Sound: Hideaki Takahashi
Floating in the air, a colossal sculpture is born from a sea of foam, transcending the concept of mass. It neither sinks to the ground nor rises all the way to the ceiling, but drifts somewhere in the middle of the space. The outline of this floating sculpture’s existence is ambiguous; it can break apart into smaller pieces or merge together into a larger mass. Even if a person enters it with their whole body, its existence is maintained, and even if it is broken by people, it repairs itself. However, when the mass is destroyed beyond the range it can repair on its own, the repairs cannot keep up and it begins to collapse. And even if people try to push it or move it aside, they cannot move this sculpture; if people fan wind at it, the sculpture will scatter. No physical action by humans can even move this sculpture.
Pebbles, and things humans have made up to now, are objects, and objects have stable structures in themselves. A pebble continues to exist even if placed in a sealed box cut off from the outside world.
By contrast, a vortex born in the sea disappears instantly when moved into a closed box. In other words, a vortex does not maintain a stable structure of its own. A vortex is an existence within the flow created by its environment, formed by water that continuously flows from outside the vortex to inside, and from inside to outside. Sustained by the structured order generated by that flow, the vortex continues to exist and changes along with the flow. And the outline of its existence is ambiguous: both the vortex and the outside of the vortex are made of water, with no material difference at all.
Instead of creating objects, by creating a special environment, existence is created through the order of energy generated by that environment. Let us call existence formed by this order of energy “Higher-Order Sculpture.” It cannot be separated from its environment and changes as the environment changes. It transcends the conventional understanding of existence based on objects, maintains its presence in midair, and has an ambiguous outline. Even if a person enters it with their whole body, its existence is maintained, and if it is broken, it repairs its own existence.
It is a sculpture premised on an open system.
In this space, the only matter that exists is water, air, and ordinary soap.
By filling the space with foam, creating a singular environment, and generating an order of energy within it, a colossal mass is born from the sea of bubbles, rises up, and remains suspended in midair.
In current biology, it is not possible to define life strictly, but for convenience, living things are called organisms if they are composed of cells, metabolize, and can self-replicate. In other words, all living things are made of cells. And all cells are enclosed by cell membranes composed of lipid bilayers. The outside of the bilayer is hydrophilic, the space between the layers is hydrophobic, and both the outside and inside of the enclosing sac are water. Soap bubbles are similarly enclosed by membranes made of lipid bilayers, and the bubbles that constitute this sculpture are structurally the same as cell membranes. However, unlike cells, the outside of the bilayer in a bubble is hydrophobic and the space between the layers is hydrophilic, so both the outside and inside of the sac are air. In other words, if a cell is a sac-like membrane in water, a bubble is a sac-like membrane in air.
This sculpture is created from matter with the same structure as cells, the basic units of living organisms, and from the order of energy generated by the environment.
Life, too, takes in matter and energy from outside as food, expels matter, and dissipates energy outward while forming ordered structures. Like a vortex, life is an existence within the flow of matter and energy created by the external environment, and the outline of its existence is ambiguous.
The structure of life is the order of energy created by that flow, and life may be a miraculous phenomenon found within the flow of matter and energy.
Artwork page: https://www.teamlab.art/jp/ew/masslesssculpture-kyoto/kyoto/
Pebbles, and things humans have made up to now, are objects, and objects have stable structures in themselves. A pebble continues to exist even if placed in a sealed box cut off from the outside world.
By contrast, a vortex born in the sea disappears instantly when moved into a closed box. In other words, a vortex does not maintain a stable structure of its own. A vortex is an existence within the flow created by its environment, formed by water that continuously flows from outside the vortex to inside, and from inside to outside. Sustained by the structured order generated by that flow, the vortex continues to exist and changes along with the flow. And the outline of its existence is ambiguous: both the vortex and the outside of the vortex are made of water, with no material difference at all.
Instead of creating objects, by creating a special environment, existence is created through the order of energy generated by that environment. Let us call existence formed by this order of energy “Higher-Order Sculpture.” It cannot be separated from its environment and changes as the environment changes. It transcends the conventional understanding of existence based on objects, maintains its presence in midair, and has an ambiguous outline. Even if a person enters it with their whole body, its existence is maintained, and if it is broken, it repairs its own existence.
It is a sculpture premised on an open system.
In this space, the only matter that exists is water, air, and ordinary soap.
By filling the space with foam, creating a singular environment, and generating an order of energy within it, a colossal mass is born from the sea of bubbles, rises up, and remains suspended in midair.
In current biology, it is not possible to define life strictly, but for convenience, living things are called organisms if they are composed of cells, metabolize, and can self-replicate. In other words, all living things are made of cells. And all cells are enclosed by cell membranes composed of lipid bilayers. The outside of the bilayer is hydrophilic, the space between the layers is hydrophobic, and both the outside and inside of the enclosing sac are water. Soap bubbles are similarly enclosed by membranes made of lipid bilayers, and the bubbles that constitute this sculpture are structurally the same as cell membranes. However, unlike cells, the outside of the bilayer in a bubble is hydrophobic and the space between the layers is hydrophilic, so both the outside and inside of the sac are air. In other words, if a cell is a sac-like membrane in water, a bubble is a sac-like membrane in air.
This sculpture is created from matter with the same structure as cells, the basic units of living organisms, and from the order of energy generated by the environment.
Life, too, takes in matter and energy from outside as food, expels matter, and dissipates energy outward while forming ordered structures. Like a vortex, life is an existence within the flow of matter and energy created by the external environment, and the outline of its existence is ambiguous.
The structure of life is the order of energy created by that flow, and life may be a miraculous phenomenon found within the flow of matter and energy.
Artwork page: https://www.teamlab.art/jp/ew/masslesssculpture-kyoto/kyoto/






