March 23 - 23, 2025
From the San Antonio Museum of Art:
“The San Antonio Museum of Art (SAMA) is thrilled to announce teamLab: The World of Irreversible Change, a focus exhibition featuring a contemporary digital artwork by renowned art collective teamLab alongside a seventeenth-century Japanese screen from the Museum’s collection.
“We are thrilled to present teamLab’s digital artwork alongside a historical artwork from SAMA’s collection,” said Lana Meador, Associate Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art. “These complementary but vastly different mediums bring forward timely and vital concepts such as digital vs. analog, collective creativity, and humanity’s relationship to the environment.”
Opening March 23, 2024, and running through March 23, 2025, the exhibition will be on view in the Museum’s Contemporary II gallery. This is the first time The World of Irreversible Change, on loan to SAMA from the Carl & Marilynn Thoma Foundation, will be shown at a public institution in the US.
“We are delighted to present this art installation at SAMA for the first time,” said Emily Ballew Neff, PhD, The Kelso Director at SAMA. “We are grateful to the Carl & Marilynn Thoma Foundation for loaning us this innovative and groundbreaking installation and look forward to continue working with them for years to come.”
The visual format of teamLab’s The World of Irreversible Change resembles that of historic Japanese screens such as Scenes in and Around Kyoto (Rakuchu Rakugai-zu), which presents a bird’s-eye view of the ancient capital city. In teamLab’s interactive artwork, viewers’ actions affect a virtual city and influence the behavior of the people in it. Over time, the accumulated aggression can break out into war among the figures, resulting in the total annihilation of their population, their homes, and their land. Although its inhabitants may become agitated and cause destruction, regrowth of the virtual environment continues eternally, albeit forever changed. Presented across six monitors, the artwork changes in real-time with the seasons, weather, and the time of day of its location—in this case, San Antonio.
“The presentation of teamLab’s work connects well with SAMA’s wonderful collection of Japanese art, covering Japan’s long and rich artistic traditions,” said Shawn Yuan, Associate Curator of Asian Art.
teamLab: The World of Irreversible Change is curated by Lana Meador, Associate Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art, Shawn Yuan, Associate Curator of Asian Art, and Emily Sano, Senior Advisor for Asian Art, Emeritus.
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This presentation is made possible by a generous loan from the Carl & Marilynn Thoma Foundation.
About teamLab
teamLab (founded 2001) is an international art collective headquartered in Tokyo. Their collaborative practice seeks to navigate the confluence of art, science, technology, and the natural world. Through art, the interdisciplinary group of specialists, including artists, programmers, engineers, CG animators, mathematicians, and architects, aims to explore the relationship between the self and the world and new forms of perception.
About the Thoma Foundation
The Carl & Marilynn Thoma Art Foundation recognizes the power of the arts to challenge and shift perceptions, spark creativity, and connect people across cultures. The Foundation lends and exhibits artworks and supports pivotal initiatives in the arts, providing grants to nonprofit organizations whose innovative projects and original ideas will advance scholarship in the arts. In addition, the Foundation funds initiatives beyond the artworld that strengthen community, leadership, and education in our targeted geographic region of Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas.
San Antonio Museum of Art
The San Antonio Museum of Art serves as a forum to explore and connect with art that spans the world’s geographies, artistic periods, genres, and cultures. Its collection contains nearly 30,000 works representing 5,000 years of history. Housed in the historic Lone Star Brewery on the Museum Reach of San Antonio’s River Walk, the San Antonio Museum of Art is committed to promoting the rich cultural heritage and life of the city.”
200 W Jones Avenue
San Antonio, 78215 TX
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