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TeamLab Botanical Garden Osaka, located inside Nagai Botanical Garden in Osaka, is an immersive nighttime art exhibition that blends nature with digital technology.
The exhibition officially opened in 2022 and covers a vast area of about 240,000 square meters. Centered around the garden’s large pond, the space transforms from a lush green botanical garden during the day into a dreamlike digital art world after dark.

Unlike teamLab’s indoor exhibitions, this one has no enclosed walls or fixed routes.
Visitors are free to explore at their own pace, walking through forests and open grassy areas while experiencing a magical mix of light and sound.
TeamLab’s concept here is to turn nature itself into art without damaging it.
Through light, sound, and interactive technology, the trees, flowers, and water all become part of the artwork.
As you move through different areas, the lights respond to your presence, constantly changing with your movements.

Every visit feels different depending on the weather, season, and number of visitors, making each experience truly one of a kind.
Since the exhibition is only open at night, the entire garden is surrounded by darkness once you enter, with glowing artworks lighting up the landscape.
The atmosphere feels quiet, mysterious, and almost otherworldly.
Because this exhibition is quite popular, there is usually a line to enter.
It’s highly recommended to buy tickets online in advance to save time.
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“Resonating Microcosms in the Common Camellia Garden” is one of the most iconic installations at teamLab Botanical Garden Osaka.
As you walk into this area, the first thing you notice is a series of egg-shaped light sculptures scattered among trees and pathways. They glow softly, creating a dreamy and almost magical atmosphere.
TeamLab designed two different types of light textures here: “Solidified Light Color” and “Liquid Light Color.” The solidified light looks clearer and more glossy, while the liquid light feels softer and slightly misty.
These glowing orbs are not static. Their colors and brightness change over time and react to human interaction.



Each egg-shaped light feels almost alive. When you approach or gently touch one, its color brightens and a unique sound plays. This reaction then spreads outward to nearby orbs, creating a ripple-like effect of light and sound across the garden.
You can even push the orbs over. When one falls, it emits a stronger burst of light and sound, then slowly returns to its original upright position on its own.
The entire camellia garden feels like a living, breathing world that responds to you.



In the eucalyptus forest, you’ll find even larger egg-shaped light sculptures, many of them taller than a person. Their round shapes and vivid colors make them look like glowing creatures standing quietly in the dark.

Walking through this glowing forest, you can interact closely with these massive light orbs. Their surfaces are soft and slightly elastic, so when you press or push them, they light up brightly and emit distinct sounds as their colors shift.
The light and sound don’t stay limited to one orb. They spread to nearby orbs, creating a chain reaction throughout the forest.

Because the spacing between the orbs varies, you sometimes have to gently squeeze through narrow gaps or walk around them, almost like navigating a maze made of breathing light.

When you stand in front of a glowing orb to take photos, the light spreads behind you, turning your figure into a silhouette and creating a beautifully surreal image.


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This large-scale installation is called “Sculptures of Dissipative Birds in the Wind.”
Light projections drift across the massive sculptures, with colors constantly shifting and flowing. The effect feels like an Impressionist painting slowly moving in the night, and it reminded me of Van Gogh’s Starry Night.
Despite the name, you won’t actually see birds depicted in the sculpture. Instead of showing birds directly, the artwork uses light, wind, and movement to express the energy left behind when birds fly through the air.

When real birds fly nearby, the installation responds by changing its colors and brightness based on their flight paths and the movement of the wind. It allows you to “see” traces of birds flying through the night.
When no birds are around, the sculpture becomes completely dark and blends into the night, almost as if it never existed.


To encourage birds to visit, the small island in the pond where the artwork is located is planted with vegetation that attracts insects and birds. Because of this, the piece is not just an art installation, but a living ecosystem that changes with time, weather, wind, and life itself.

At the entrance to the forest, the entire area appears to be wrapped in a massive net of light floating among the trees.
As the lighting shifts, the forest seems to separate into layered planes, creating a fascinating three-dimensional illusion. Real trees and abstract light overlap, making it hard to tell where reality ends and projection begins.

As you walk deeper into the forest, a stream of blue light moves through the air as if it’s writing characters made of light.
The movement feels like calligraphy, sometimes fast, sometimes slow, as if you can sense the pressure and rhythm of a brushstroke. The thickness, brightness, and fading of the light resemble ink spreading across paper.

The blue light floats like calligraphy suspended in midair, turning the entire forest into a canvas made of light.

Near One Stroke, Secondary Forest, you’ll find “Universe of Fire Particles in the Forest – Secondary Forest.” Here, a flame appears to float and dance among the trees.
TeamLab presents the flame as a three-dimensional form, making it look both real and dreamlike at the same time.
This artwork also includes a fun interactive element. You can download the “Distributed Fire” app on your phone. When you approach the flame, the fire on your screen ignites, allowing you to take the flame with you.

Even more interesting, you can pass the flame to other people. When you get close to someone else, their phone can catch the fire too. The flame spreads from person to person, one interaction at a time.
TeamLab calls this concept “distributed art,” meaning that art doesn’t stay confined to the exhibition space. It can be carried, shared, and passed on through human connections.
Even if the original installation disappears, the flame continues to exist through people, becoming a form of art with no center, yet able to live on endlessly.
Our final stop was the large central pond, where the installation “Floating Resonating Lamps on Oike Lake – Fire” is located. It’s a dreamy and romantic light installation that feels especially magical at night.
As you stand by the pond after dark, you’ll see glowing spherical lamps floating gently on the water, slowly swaying with the current.

The colors of the lights keep changing, sometimes warm shades of orange and red, other times soft pinks or mysterious blues. Their reflections appear clearly on the surface of the pond, creating a beautiful, mirror-like scene with perfect symmetry.
Watching the lamps drift across the water, with light and reflections moving quietly together, the whole view feels calm, poetic, and incredibly peaceful.

Visiting teamLab Botanical Garden Osaka was truly a special experience. Since the entire exhibition takes place inside Nagai Botanical Garden, the trees, grass, and ponds all become part of the artwork once night falls.
Every few steps, you encounter a different light installation. Some pieces respond to your movement, while others change with the wind and surroundings. The atmosphere feels romantic, slightly mysterious, and very immersive.
The garden is quite large, and we took our time walking through the entire area. It took us a little over two hours to see everything.
TeamLab blends nature and technology in a very natural, unforced way. It doesn’t feel like you’re just viewing an exhibition, you feel like you’re taking part in an artistic journey that coexists with nature.
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