
For the first time, Shanghai has seen a large-scale gathering of contemporary young artists to create a dreamlike multimedia art exhibition — Phantas magoria, weaving together “reality” and “virtuality.” The exhibition opened on May 18th at the Jing’an Sculpture Park Art Center, featuring 31 young artists/groups and musicians showcasing 45 multimedia artworks. These works represent a “negation and re-adaptation” to tradition, a “re-innovation through reflection” on the present, and a “re-exploration and re-foresight” of the future.
The young artists explored the origins of the world through experimentation, technology, and digital methods, expressing artistic concepts. Through painting, they explored the relationship between humanity and the internet, expressing human mental states and emotional states. Simulating the ecosystem of fish, the flight of birds, and the connection between cellular neuronal synapses and the external world, they reflected on life. By incorporating the currently popular Sanxingdui culture, they used its expressive forms to interpret historical civilization and original culture in a new era, expressing them with contemporary thinking.
Located in the atrium of the exhibition hall, the artwork “Energy Memory” transforms intangible energy into tangible interaction, integrating sound, light, and electricity to present a unique light and shadow show.
Exploring the “boundary between virtual and reality,” the Bringidea team uses a unique design language to create sensory and multimedia interactive installations, blending media with technological innovation to offer a glimpse into a new digital future. Viewers may interpret “Energy Memory” as a sensory installation integrating sound, light, and electricity, a visual work radiating cool lights, or a form of energy expression constructed in real space. The Bringidea team’s “Energy Memory” offers multiple interpretations, allowing people to see and contemplate new perspectives from different vantage points.






