Manabe Daito: Pushing the Boundaries Between Art and Technology

Technology Art Arts

We sat down with Rhizomatiks chief Manabe Daito to talk about his work with drones and augmented reality and how he is using them to push the boundaries of artistic expression forward.

Manabe Daito

Media artist, programmer, DJ, and executive at Rhizomatiks. Born in Tokyo in 1976. Attended the Tokyo University of Science before entering the Institute of Advanced Media Arts and Sciences. Cofounded Rhizomatiks after graduating in 2006. Since 2015, has also been running Rhizomatiks Research, the company’s creation and technology team. Creates works that utilize the human body in conjunction with programming, securing him various awards both in Japan and abroad. His personal website is www.daito.ws and the Rhizomatiks website is rhizomatiks.com.

On the World Stage at the Olympic Games

It was in this fashion that Manabe’s works, combining facets of media art with experimentation and the artist’s message, sought to achieve a greater physicality, one that needed to be physically experienced. Manabe and company moved on to their next experiment, again collaborating with Mikiko—this time working not with Perfume, but with her female-only dance company ElevenPlay.

“One thing I tried was using sensors to pick up on dancers’ movements and then reproduce those movements with a flock of drones,” explains Manabe. One experiment involved putting audience members in personal mobility units with VR headsets, transporting them in between the realms of the real and the virtual—an experiment in combining visuals and sound, hardware and software, and the human body itself. “The experience I gained through that project helped me when it came time to put on the live performance for the Rio De Janeiro Olympics.”

A photo of the collaborative performance by Rhizomatiks Research and ElevenPlay titled Border, performed in February 2016 at the Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media. (© Muryō Honma; courtesy of Rhizomatiks Research)

Given the international prestige of a global performance platform like the Olympics, failure is simply not an option. To try and bring any kind of live performance elements onto that stage carries with it an enormous risk. But that is just what Manabe and his team did, creating a performance that used augmented reality by sensing motions in real time, combining that data with the choreography of dancers and flickering three-dimensional frames. To synchronize all of these elements, he would need a system architecture allowing extreme precision and detailed simulation.

“The performance for the Olympic closing ceremony was unprecedented,” says Manabe. “After Prime Minister Abe took the stage, we used AR visuals to show the thirty-three events that will be held at the Tokyo Olympics. In order to really create the sense of atmosphere we needed, it had to be done in real time. Just pressing play on some CG videos that had already been created didn’t interest me. This was an event that people all over the world were watching live, and if the visuals themselves weren’t live, it seemed pointless. It wasn’t simply about using new technology—I wanted to bring people the context of a live performance, something that would really move their hearts and minds.”

A scene from the flag handover ceremony promoting the 2020 Tokyo Olympics at the closing of the Rio de Janeiro games. (© Tokyo 2020/Takemi Shūgo)

In the end, the Olympic presentation was a success, giving both Manabe and Rhizomatiks a jolt of global fame. His works are also increasingly featured on television, with each showing inspiring a wave of social media reactions that sometimes border on the bewildered: “That was amazing, but I have no idea what it was that I just watched.”

“I’m not surprised when I hear that kind of reaction,” laughs Manabe. “For the past several years, I’ve been pursuing the idea of making people unsure of where the line lies between reality and virtual reality. What is really interesting to me is how people’s posts on social media outlets have shown their growing awareness of cutting-edge technology. During NHK’s 2017 New Year’s Eve Kōhaku Uta Gassen music program, they had lights in the windows of buildings in Shibuya, dancing up and down like an equalizer to the tune of Perfume’s music. People were out there wondering, ‘Is this really happening? Is this VR?’ They were taking photos and investigating it and posting about it all over social media. It’s these kinds of things that I find interesting.”

next: To Move People’s Hearts and Minds

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