Digital Art In Tokyo
AOW #20-Responding to "'Ultra-technologists' to open digital-only museum in Tokyo" By Stephy Chung
February 3, 2018
This Week's Focus:
Rhetorical Precis
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Link to Article: 'Ultra-technologists' to open digital-only museum in Tokyo (January 27th, 2018)
Editor from CNN Art, Stephy Chung, in her article about Japanese art,'Ultra-technologists' to open digital-only museum in Tokyo(January 27th, 2018) covers a different proposition put forth by experimental Japanese art collective, teamLab, in which they plan to open a 107,000 square-foot museum (10,000 square meters) in Tokyo covered entirely with digital works. She supports her claim by announcing that the forthcoming museum will expand upon ideas and technologies used from the collective's previous work, which includes interactive installations shown in galleries as far afield as London, Sydney and Istanbul. One of the art works is "Walk, Walk, Walk: Search, Deviate, Reunite,". Chung describes that inside the installation, visitors are invited to stroll among cherry blossoms and bamboo forests, passing digital pedestrians who change direction and respond to real-life movements. They are many other works like these that are soon to be released to the public in this museum. Stephy's purpose is to announce and persuade readers about the opening of a recent digital museum in Tokyo. She adopts a capturing and engaging tone for museum and digital fanatics in order to pique their curiosity into visiting one of Tokyo's first ever digital museum's.
Editor from CNN Art, Stephy Chung, in her article about Japanese art,'Ultra-technologists' to open digital-only museum in Tokyo(January 27th, 2018) covers a different proposition put forth by experimental Japanese art collective, teamLab, in which they plan to open a 107,000 square-foot museum (10,000 square meters) in Tokyo covered entirely with digital works. She supports her claim by announcing that the forthcoming museum will expand upon ideas and technologies used from the collective's previous work, which includes interactive installations shown in galleries as far afield as London, Sydney and Istanbul. One of the art works is "Walk, Walk, Walk: Search, Deviate, Reunite,". Chung describes that inside the installation, visitors are invited to stroll among cherry blossoms and bamboo forests, passing digital pedestrians who change direction and respond to real-life movements. They are many other works like these that are soon to be released to the public in this museum. Stephy's purpose is to announce and persuade readers about the opening of a recent digital museum in Tokyo. She adopts a capturing and engaging tone for museum and digital fanatics in order to pique their curiosity into visiting one of Tokyo's first ever digital museum's.
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