LED.ART has been presenting seasonally curated media art across three large-scale platforms in Shinjuku and Shibuya—YUNIKA Vision, Cross Vision, and Pandora Visions. This spring, SHIBUHARA Vision at Harajuku's SHIBUHARA Xross joins the lineup, expanding the network to four screens. Located in Jingumae 6-chome, the gateway along Meiji-dori where Shibuya and Harajuku meet, SHIBUHARA Xross stands as a new landmark at the intersection of the two districts' trends and cultures. Its façade, SHIBUHARA Vision, is a 12.5m × 15.2m display that faces both Shibuya and Harajuku, meeting the pedestrian flow from either direction and turning the streetscape itself into a canvas.
For the spring collection, Daria Anise's Flower Elephant was screened across all four platforms. Created with procedural techniques in Houdini, the 3D work is part of the Flower Series—an exploration of nature and motion in which masses of flowers behave like fluids, gathering into the form of an elephant before dispersing once more. On these large urban screens, the blooming swarm coalescing into a single living figure and then releasing again layers a sense of spring over the hourly rhythm of Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Harajuku. For passersby who pause along the way, what unfolds is not advertising but a painterly moment encountered in the middle of the city—where everyday Tokyo and media art briefly share the same frame.
TOKYO, JAPAN l 2026
LICENSED ARTWORKS Click on the image,you will be taken to the content page.
ART CURATION in TOKYO 'SPRING'
LED.ART has been presenting seasonally curated media art across three large-scale platforms in Shinjuku and Shibuya—YUNIKA Vision, Cross Vision, and Pandora Visions. This spring, SHIBUHARA Vision at Harajuku's SHIBUHARA Xross joins the lineup, expanding the network to four screens. Located in Jingumae 6-chome, the gateway along Meiji-dori where Shibuya and Harajuku meet, SHIBUHARA Xross stands as a new landmark at the intersection of the two districts' trends and cultures. Its façade, SHIBUHARA Vision, is a 12.5m × 15.2m display that faces both Shibuya and Harajuku, meeting the pedestrian flow from either direction and turning the streetscape itself into a canvas.
For the spring collection, Daria Anise's Flower Elephant was screened across all four platforms. Created with procedural techniques in Houdini, the 3D work is part of the Flower Series—an exploration of nature and motion in which masses of flowers behave like fluids, gathering into the form of an elephant before dispersing once more. On these large urban screens, the blooming swarm coalescing into a single living figure and then releasing again layers a sense of spring over the hourly rhythm of Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Harajuku. For passersby who pause along the way, what unfolds is not advertising but a painterly moment encountered in the middle of the city—where everyday Tokyo and media art briefly share the same frame.
TOKYO, JAPAN l 2026
LICENSED ARTWORKS Click on the image,you will be taken to the content page.