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A new art museum has opened in Tokyo, and visitors are invited to touch the art. The creators say the new museum is the world's largest dedicated to digital, interactive art.

The museum is called MORI Building DIGITAL ART MUSEUM: teamLab Borderless. It is in Tokyo's Odaiba district. The museum combines science, art, technology, design and images of the natural world with simulations generated by 520 computers and 470 high-tech projectors. With over 107,000 square feet of space, the museum has 50 interactive displays that blend into one another over five different zones. The exhibit's "borderless" name encourages breaking down barriers. The barriers between one piece of art and another, art and its visitors, and one person and another.

The museum is a partnership between Mori Building, a developer, and teamLab, an art collective.



"If an artist can put thoughts and feelings directly into people's experiences, artworks, too, can move freely, form connections and relationships with people, and have the same concept of time as the human body," Toshiyuki Inoko, founder of teamLab, said in a press release. "Artworks can transcend boundaries, influence and sometimes intermingle with each other. In this way, all the boundaries between artist, people and artworks dissolve and the world teamLab Borderless is created."

The Five Zones
There are five connected zones in the museum. The first zone is "Borderless World," an interactive digital landscape. There, visitors are encouraged to create their own path. People walk through digitized waterfalls. They "touch" luminescent birds and walk through computer-generated forests and fields.

"Time here changes constantly — the seasons and flower forests are always changing," Inoko explains to The Telegraph's Danielle Demetriou. "It exists now, but you'll never be able to see it exactly the same way again."

The second zone is the "Athletics Forest." The zone is intended to train the brain's spatial recognition abilities. It also gets people moving, according to teamLab. The exhibit has visitors climbing on flashing poles. They bounce on a trampoline through a galaxy simulation. They also balance on hanging boards that dangle in a show of colorful lights.

"Future Park" is designed for children. The park has kids interact with the art through various games and activities. One piece of art is an aquarium. It is teeming with digital fish designed by the kids themselves. A musical wall plays sounds upon touch, too. The activities are designed to help expand the imagination and teach scientific concepts.

Moving from the park, the exhibition turns into the "Forest of Lamps." Visitors stand engulfed in a sea of colorful lamps where light spreads from one lamp to the next once a lamp is touched. The final experience is calmer. Guests enter the "En Tea House." They sip cups of green tea while augmented reality technology makes digital flowers bloom inside their cups. Through the communal act of enjoying tea, the exhibition encourages visitors to talk to one another.



"We immerse and meld ourselves into this unified world," Inoko says in the press release. "We explore a new relationship that transcends the boundaries between people, and between people and the world."

Expensive Experience To Extend
The museum currently costs 2,400 Japanese Yen (or roughly 21.82 USD) per adult to enter. If that seems expensive, it's due to the costs of creating the art. "The production costs of building the immersive environments, and the tech team required to make it work, are really substantial — often millions of dollars," said Peter Boris. He is the executive vice president of Pace Gallery. Their gallery has hosted four teamLab exhibitions. "The business model becomes more like entertainment, movies, theater, music (so) we have made it work by selling tickets."

The museum's five different spaces are on permanent display, though the nature of digitized art means the installations will be constantly changing.

Which sentence from the article shows Toshiyuki Inoko's MAIN opinion about the new museum?

A
"Time here changes constantly — the seasons and flower forests are always changing," Inoko explains to The Telegraph's Danielle Demetriou.
B
"It exists now, but you'll never be able to see it exactly the same way again."
C
"We explore a new relationship that transcends the boundaries between people, and between people and the world."
D
"The business model becomes more like entertainment, movies, theater, music (so) we have made it work by selling tickets."

User Bjlaub
by
1.9k points

2 Answers

12 votes
12 votes

Answer:

B

Step-by-step explanation:

Just guessing

User Arnaud Rinquin
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3.4k points
20 votes
20 votes
the answer for the question is D your welcome
User Thib L
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2.8k points