Issue No. 38: Gardens, Galaxies and Gossamer Glints: The Weekly Wondrous World
Lou Pizante
Behind the curtains stagehand rigging numbers, laws, and big dreams | WXO Council Member | Blooloop 50 Immersive Influencer
Issue No. 38 - Welcome to Issue No. 38 of The Experientialist, discerning reader, where we’ve boldly returned from a much-needed holiday that took us to the Astral Plane’s Grand Bazaar (where quantum physicists haggle over metaphors), a detour to the Edge of the Multiverse (turns out, it’s less an edge and more a polite fade-out with really great coffee shops), and a long weekend in the metaphysical Bermuda Triangle (the souvenirs were weird).
We return revitalized, having wandered through glow-in-the-dark obstacle courses judged by sarcastic AI's, secret speakeasies hidden inside asteroid fields, and escape rooms where every door led to a maze of bad decisions and great special effects. We competed in cosmic karaoke with a crowd of stardust beings and joined immersive theater productions where even the ushers were in character. Now brimming with cosmic inspiration, we’re ready to infuse some of that magic into this very Issue No. 38.
As fate—or, if you’re into Kabbalah, the cosmic significance of the number 38—would have it, we’ve landed on a number that represents not just harmony but the universal balance of Design, Technology, Commerce, and Culture, like some numerological Swiss Army knife. In mathematics, 38 is a semiprime—which means it’s a rebellious overachiever that refuses to be easily divisible—and honestly, if that doesn’t embody the spirit of the experiential, we don’t know what does.
And now, speaking of dividing, let’s split the wonders of 38 into our focal points of Design, Technology, Commerce and Culture...
If 1938 hadn’t shown up with its Design brilliance, our PowerPoints today would look like ransom notes slapped together by caffeinated cats. In 1938, MoMA wasn’t just curating art—it was throwing a design revolution disguised as a Bauhaus exhibition, ensuring that architecture and typography would never again be left to chance. Over in Switzerland, Josef Müller-Brockmann was busy inventing grids so effective that even bad ideas started looking professional. The sum of these contributions? An eternal debt to the number 38—because without it, we’d all still be slapping misplaced Comic Sans on wedding invitations so busy with swirls and gilded borders they’d need their own appendix.
Technology thrives on 38, which may explain why your router is still working when nothing else is. Want to thank ASCII Code 38? Just look at the ampersand—a symbol so essential it’s like the multitool of punctuation: a conjunction, a decorative flourish, & a desperate, shorthand cry for help when you’re trying to cram too many ideas into one sentence. Meanwhile, the 38 GHz frequency keeps your TikTok videos loading faster than your emotional baggage, and Windows Error Code 38 warns you when, metaphorically speaking, the universe just rage-quit its Excel spreadsheet.
Commerce thrives on 38 tons—the exact weight a 20-foot shipping container can handle before ocean liners throw a tantrum. ISO 4217 generously provides 38 currency codes, so no matter where you travel, you can marvel at how little you understand exchange rates. And let’s not forget that 38% of the U.S. Consumer Price Index comes from housing expenses, which means your rent/mortgage is also helping prove the cosmic relevance of this glorious number.
Culturally? With 38 plays to his name, William Shakespeare didn’t just define the English language—he gave high schoolers something to SparkNote forever. Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address redefined efficiency with 38 lines that said more than a year’s worth of your work emails. And the 38th parallel? It’s not just a line on a map. It’s the dividing line that gave us BTS and Squid Game. You’re welcome.
There you have it: indisputable proof that 38 is not just a number—it’s a force of nature. Call it serendipity, call it divine intervention, but one thing’s certain: without 38, our civilization would collapse into chaos, leaving us to wander aimlessly in a world of odd numbers and Helvetica Neue.
And that ought to be enough to ready you for your all-access ticket to the sublime and surreal! This issue so jam-packed with jaw-dropping experiential wonders, you’ll question whether we’ve hacked reality itself (our lips are sealed). From James Turrell’s volcanic art experiments to Moment Factory ’s starlit escapades, we’re charting the terrain where light, sound, and imagination collide. Get the inside scoop on Disney Imagineering, experience the digital rebirth of ukiyo-e, and explore a town-sized escape room. Whether it’s AI-haunted houses or Nosferatu throwing the year’s hottest graveyard party, this issue celebrates the wild, weird, and wonderful world of experiential art and entertainment.
So off we are, here were go, let's dig in...
ICYMI: Our Definitive Report on 2025’s Top Emerging Experiential Trends
We glimpsed the future of experiential entertainment, and it’s gazing back at us with a thousand flickering screens and a slightly unsettling grin. This report serves as your essential guide to navigating the next wave of immersive experiences. In it, The Experientialist reveal the trends that will redefine how we experience…well, everything. The Experientialist (8 minutes)
The Artist Who Broke Time, Space, and Visitors’ Wrists
Meet James Turrell, the artistic mastermind who has been coaxing a dormant volcano in Arizona into becoming an art museum for four decades—a process slower than a snail with commitment issues. Despite inflation, pandemic delays, and the occasional visitor mistaking his light installations for walls, Turrell remains the Michelangelo of “nothingness,” ?the Picasso of perceptual trickery, crafting luminous voids so disorienting even Putin tapped out in under a minute.? Between creating light that confuses humans into breaking bones and dazzling Kanye West into shelling out $10 million, Turrell has become the Bob Ross of baffling brilliance.? His Paris exhibition is the latest attempt to remind us all that art can be both visually stunning and utterly incomprehensible. Numero (9 minutes)
Scoops up, peeps! James Turrell. The exhibition “At One” will be open from October 14th to Summer 2025 at the?Gagosian Gallery, Le Bourget, Paris.
Portraits Plugged
Britain’s latest gift to the world: a way to enjoy 500 years of history without having to, you know, read anything. In a daring attempt to combine high art and Instagram bait, the National Portrait Gallery in collaboration with Frameless is launching an immersive experience that promises Hollywood effects, emotional music, and—yes—portraits projected onto walls. Dubbed "National Portrait Gallery Unframed," expect a sensory overload of digital projections, movie effects, and stories so vividly told you’ll feel like you’re being shouted at by Henry VIII himself. Launching in Manchester before touring the world, it’s art for people who wish the Renaissance came with Dolby Surround Sound. MSN (3 minutes)
Shipping Container of Horrors
DARKFIELD is bringing its signature blend of sensory terror and existential whiplash to Dallas, where audiences will get the rare opportunity to freak out in a shipping container. In SéANCE, you’ll experience ghostly whispers, eerie vibes, and the sudden realization that Victorian spirits might be judging your outfit from the afterlife. FLIGHT puts you in a replica airplane cabin where parallel realities take off, and not all of them land safely. COMA, meanwhile, lures you into a horizontal group nap that feels more like a science experiment for insomniacs with trust issues. Expect to confront your deepest fears—or at least discover why ghosts are so obsessed with dim lighting, and whether you can survive economy seating on a quantum plane. Big thanks to Andrea Salazar, Victoria Eyton, Amy Johnson and Nathan Alexander for showcasing their true genius: making us happily pay good money—and even our sanity—for the privilege?of stepping into a pitch-black shipping container to experience ghostly dread and mild claustrophobia. You guys rock.
Scoops up, peeps! DARKFIELD exhibits March 21 – May 4, 2025 at Sammons Park in Dallas, TX. Get more information here.
The Imagineer Chronicles
Disney veteran and master world-builder Theron Skees is trading in his Imagineering pixie dust for publishing ink with a 2025 book so packed with themed design wisdom, it might as well come with its own animatronic narrator. "Creating Memorable Worlds" promises to teach readers how to build immersive experiences, whether you’re designing a theme park or transforming your laundry room into a thrilling cave adventure. Featuring anecdotes, industry secrets, and a foreword by Experience Economy guru Joe Pine, this is your theme park playbook, because sometimes you need more than duct tape and dreams. Learn more here.
Where the Universe Goes to Get Its Glam On
Astra Lumina at the South Coast Botanic Garden, part of?Moment Factory’s awe-inspiring Lumina Enchanted Night Walk series, is the only place where you’ll find a garden that moonlights as a disco ball for the universe. With shimmering lights, ethereal music, and cosmic storytelling, Moment Factory’s immersive experience turns night walks into an intergalactic adventure.? Here, you can wander a magical pathway where lights dance, stars whisper secrets (probably), and the night sky feels like it’s auditioning for a Broadway role. It’s part art installation, part cosmic therapy session, and all the proof you need that if the stars had Yelp, they’d probably give this place five supernovas. Eternal applause to Catherine L. Lachance and all my friends at Moment Factory for for proving, yet again, that stars aren’t the only ones capable of dazzling us!
Scoops up, peeps! Astra Lumina continues its run through March 9, 2025 at the South Coast Botanic Garden 26300, Crenshaw Blvd, Palos Verdes Peninsula. Get tix here!
The Future of Live Experiences is Ridiculously Awesome
XP Land isn’t just ahead of the curve—they’re the ones building it. For 2025, they rallied a dream team of creative juggernauts, industry soothsayers,?and our very own Lou Pizante, whose bold predictions almost distract from the fact he still prints out emails. After he spent 20 minutes figuring out how to unmute himself on Zoom, Lou Pizante contributed a sharp take on the rise of original IP—but not before accidentally sending a GIF of a cat in sunglasses to the group chat. With insights from Julian Rad, Louise Murray, Lesly Simmons, Geoff Renaud, Ann Morrow Johnson, AIA, Gabriela Neves, Christine Renaud, and Kim Trieu, XP Land’s crystal ball for 2025 is looking sharper than ever. The group’s big calls include events getting collaborative, sensory, and downright introspective, while Kayfabe (where reality meets fiction) creeps into everything from political rallies to immersive theater. Meanwhile, facial biometrics will soon know you better than your mom, run clubs will turn into sweaty matchmaking services for people who hate dating apps, creators will engage all five senses to foster deeper connections to audiences, and wellness experiences will become so zen you’ll forget your phone exists. Also, JOMO (Joy of Missing Out) is replacing FOMO—so go ahead, skip that party, but only if XP Land live-streams it for you. XP Land (5 minutes)
XP Land’s Guide to the Wildest Start to a Year Yet
And now another dispatch from XP Land ! Erica Boeke and her XP Land brain trust are January’s unofficial hype squad, tackling everything from CES dazzling with robots that could probably write their own press releases, to PROTOTYPE Festival in NYC pushing opera so deep into avant-garde territory that it makes you question your Spotify playlist.?Meanwhile, Sundance Institute teeters between indie magic and logistical debates over its next home, and LA’s wildfire-stricken community reminds us that even in chaos, connection and resilience shine brightest. If sharp takes and cooler-than-thou curation is your jam, man, than this one is for you! XP Land (10 minutes)
From AI to Glitter Poo: How We’re Spending $8 Trillion on Escapism
2025 attractions trends are a chaotic mashup of tech, terror, and questionable wellness. Zoos are tracking reproductive cycles with edible glitter, theme parks are using AI to make haunted houses smarter than us, chatbots are upselling churros,?and cruise ships with roller coasters are helping humanity finally merge the Titanic with Six Flags. Meanwhile, Disney and Universal are engaged in a theme park arms race, ensuring every spare dollar is spent on villain rides, Donkey Kong nostalgia, and ?“spa robots” to massage your soul while you question life in a sauna trance. Soon, the only thing more immersive than the attractions will be the debt you'll take on to enjoy them. Blooloop (17 minutes)
Are Robots Just Showing Off Now?
In the grand tradition of artists making us feel deeply inadequate, Refik Anadol, who is hellbent on giving AIs artistic freedom, teamed up with Berin Nur Kocaba?, who moonlights as a robot tamer, to craft an installation that shifts, evolves, and possibly might be plotting our obsolescence. Together, they’ve created an immersive wonderland that asks big questions like, “What is space?” and, more importantly, “Why isn’t my Roomba this talented?” The result is a space that feels alive, dynamic, and possibly smarter than everyone in the room. Parametric Architecture (2 minutes)
Zero Gravity and 20 Transducers Later, You're Reborn
We trudged every inch of the CES exhibition floor, dodging robot dogs and tech bros with AR glasses glued to their faces, only to find the most awe-inspiring innovation hiding where you'd least expected it—inside the New York-New York hotel, giggling at the irony the whole time. Imagine being cradled by a giant foam hostess while sound waves pulse through your body like an intergalactic drum circle—welcome to The Hum. This multisensory, techno-fabulous masterpiece lets you escape burnout by surrendering to vibrating chairs, ancestral beats, and a soundtrack that makes your stress pack its bags. Our unstoppable friend Gen Cleary is on a mission to make chilling out less exclusive and more mind-blowingly accessible, with plans to bring The Hum to airports and some of the other busiest, noisiest places on earth. Why? Because she has hope for humanity—and your stress levels. CNET (4 minutes)
Turning Wild Concepts Into Award-Winning Reality
The 2024 blooloop Innovation Awards at AREA15 are like the Oscars of themed attractions, except instead of actors, you get LED robots, surfing simulators, and an overachieving soccer-themed maze.?This year’s winners include a roller coaster that flings you into oblivion, a virtual docent named Alice, and a giant escape room disguised as a town, where the real mystery is why you spent three hours interrogating a guy dressed as a steampunk blacksmith. Geesh, if this doesn’t make you want to build a theme park in your backyard, nothing will. Blooloop (11 minutes)
A Town, A Blimp, A Blooloop Trophy
Now, among all the mind-bending creations celebrated this year, one in particular deserves a round of applause—and maybe an honorable key to the town it invented. Congratulations to our friends Nick Moran, Glen Hughes, and the entire Phantom Peak team for taking home the top prize in the Immersive Experience category at the 2024 blooloop Innovation Awards! If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if Sherlock Holmes teamed up with a carnival barker, a steampunk inventor, and a shady corporate mascot to build a misty riverside town full of cryptic quests, suspiciously friendly townsfolk, and a blimp looming overhead like a nosy pigeon, wonder no more—this 30,000-square-foot town of quirky characters and misty mysteries has answered that question and raised the bar for immersive entertainment.? The win proves that the only thing more impressive than a world full of mysteries is the team clever enough to build it. Learn more about Phantom Peak here.
Zen and the Art of Museum Going
You all good if we keep this party classy-ish? Huge props to Barnaby Steel and the MARSHMALLOW LASER FEAST crew, along with the legends at ACMI, for snagging second place right behind Phantom Peak at the blooloop awards. Regular readers might remember this blurb from Issue No. 31:
What happens when a laser-happy design studio and a museum with a penchant for technology decide to create a visitor experience? Well, you get ACMI's and MARSHMALLOW LASER FEAST collaboration on "Works of Nature," which included?being greeted by an interactive map, a disk that magically bookmarks your favorite exhibits, and a meditation session that’s more "zen" than napping in a yoga studio. As Lucie Paterson, Head of Experience, Digital & Insights at ACMI explains it, this onboarding process didn’t just welcome visitors—it took them on a slow, soothing journey that was equal parts art exhibit and life coaching session,leaving visitors feeling both enlightened and mildly confused about why they were suddenly so interested in nature. Medium (12 minutes)
Blooming Gardens and Wagnerian Wonders
flora&faunavisions — you glorious digital magicians — congratulations on scooping BrandEx Festival GOLD for Utopian Garden and SILVER for The Ring Cycle!?Winning GOLD for Utopian Garden is no small feat, but then again, transforming art, science, and nature into a co-creative playground of stunning digital projections is far from small-minded.?Meanwhile, SILVER for The Ring Cycle proves that an opera that lasts longer than most Netflix binges can hold our attention so long as it comes with epic LED screens, motion-tracked operatic costumes, and 14 tons of LED genius.?Congratulations to our friend Leigh Sachwitz and team on proving that innovation doesn’t just push boundaries—it builds entirely new worlds where gardens bloom and Valkyries ride across digital landscapes. You can read more on LinkedIn and learn more about flora&faunavisions here.
When Homer Met EDM
Cercle Odyssey combines DJs, Homeric poetry, and the inexplicable need for 360-degree screens to remind us that nature is best experienced indoors. Instead of schlepping to the Pyramids or floating over salt flats, you can now enjoy panoramic landscapes while surrounded by people pretending they "get" the artistic vision. It’s art, it’s music, its sustainable, and just bougie enough to possibly be the best way to experience nature without stepping on dirt. Wallpaper (6 minutes)
Scoops up, peeps! Cercle Odyssey runs from April 23-27 in Mexico, May 7-11 in Los Angeles and May 28-June 1 in Paris. You can pre-register at?odyssey.cercle.io.
Twinkle, Twinkle, $5.9 Million Art Installation
El Paso Museum of Art's Star Ceiling is a dazzling public art project that screams, “What if the Milky Way was powered by software updates?” The latest work of world-renowned El Paso-raised artist Leo Villarreal, the Star Ceiling offers 14,590 LEDs blinking in patterns that are guaranteed to never repeat, presumably intended for those who think regular stars are too damn predictable. ?This “digital campfire” pairs perfectly with the “zero-gravity” benches underneath, ideal for contemplating the universe while avoiding eye contact with strangers. The project cost $5.9 million, which is either an artistic flex or an expensive way to side-eye the actual night sky.
Saving the World One Vacation Selfie at a Time
Tired of vacations that don’t double as moral victories??These six "voluntourism" trips let you snorkel alongside whale sharks, hug endangered gorillas, and possibly become the savior of a small Himalayan village, offering the perfect mix of saving the planet and casually mentioning it at dinner parties. With activities ranging from wolf-feeding in Portugal to teaching English to kids in Guatemala while eating street tacos, it’s travel that says, “Look, I’m a better person than you.” Bonus: they come with scenery so gorgeous, you’ll almost forget you’re paying to do what’s essentially a temp job. It’s the ultimate travel flex: “Oh, you went to Italy? That’s cute—I single-handedly uplifted a community in Uttarakhand.” NDTV (5 minutes)
From Moonshine to Monet: A Museum for Everyone (Yes, Even You)
Prepare to embark on a cross-country odyssey where dinosaurs roam Denver, Mark Twain’s furniture is still gossiping in Connecticut, and the Mob’s bullet-riddled walls await you in Vegas. These 51 museums are as much about storytelling as they are about showcasing America’s need to out-weird itself one exhibit at a time. ?This list reminds us that Americans will curate anything and that no niche is too small for the United States to build a museum around it. The only thing missing? A museum for all the museums—because, let’s be honest, that’s where we’re headed. Condé Nast Traveler (26 minutes)
Pillow Mints and Prehistoric Peril
The new "Jurassic World: Rebirth" trailer is here, and it looks like Universal has finally figured out how to combine dinosaurs with drama, explosions, travel insurance product placements, and what we assume is a heroic sacrifice involving a Jeep. To complement the cinematic carnage, fans can book a stay at the Pteratops Lodge, a themed hotel?where the mini-bar is fully stocked, but so is the jungle outside your window. Guests can wake up to stunning views of the T-Rex paddock, the décor screams "prehistoric chic," and the checkout policy may or may not involve outrunning a Velociraptor. The WiFi (on the occasion its up) password is "Din0Mite!"and, much like a T-Rex, it only works if you’re standing in just the right spot. Add the "Jurassic Park: Survival" game, and this franchise officially has more immersive experiences than your therapist has coping strategies.
Tokyo’s Digital Dive into Ukiyo-e
The ukiyo-e masters of the Edo period probably didn’t envision their tranquil woodblock prints lit up like a Vegas casino, but here we are.? The Warehouse TERRADA exhibit offers 3D animations, holograms, and enough projection mapping that even the ghosts of the Edo period might consider updating their LinkedIn profiles. Who needs stillness when you can have the art equivalent of slapping an action movie soundtrack on a haiku? If you’ve ever wondered “What if Katsushika Hokusai had a graphics card?” or wanted to be physically chased by The Great Wave, this is your moment.
Scoops up, peeps! "Ukiyo-e Immersive Art: The Floating World of Japan runs Dec 21, 2024 - Mar 31, 2025 9:30 am - 8:00 pm (last admission at 7:30 pm) at Warehouse TERRADA G1 Bldg (5 minutes walk from Tennozu Isle Station). Get tix!
Nosferatu Live (Sort of)
Somewhere between immersive theater and the best way to scare your Tinder date, "Nosferatu: The Immersive Experience," a limited-time event celebrating Robert Eggers’ dark reimagining of the vampire classic, delivered a cemetery soirée that artfully combined highbrow horror with lowkey cemetery loitering. For three magical nights, attendees wandered through Hollywood Forever Cemetery's dimly lit spaces filled with film props and random “occult artifacts” that may or may not have been sourced from a Spirit Halloween sale, sipped on spooky artisanal cocktails, and, if lucky, locked eyes with Count Orlok before nervously pretending they weren’t terrified.?This collaboration came courtesy of Focus Features,?Thirteenth Floor Entertainment Group, and?BLOODY DISGUSTING, LLC, ensuring the terror was both premium and petrifying.
Finally, a Safe Place to Relive Your Childhood Trauma
Good news, Seoulites!?It’s time to live out your reality TV dreams—or nightmares—as Netflix brings "Squid Game: The Experience" to town. The experience is basically summer camp for masochists, minus the kumbaya and plus a terrifyingly lifelike doll ready to ruin your selfie. With face-scanning, high-stakes marbles, and photo zones designed to make your Instagram followers question your priorities, this is the dystopia you didn’t know you needed. Korea Herald (2 minutes)
Scoops up, peeps! "Squid Game: The Experience" runs from February 28 to June 25, 2025 in Seongsu-dong, eastern Seoul, South Korea. Ticket Prices start at 55,000 won (approximately $37).
Orem’s New Galactic Playground
Welcome to Dreamwalk Park, where sci-fi and mythology collide in a way that screams, “What if Comic-Con was an actual place you could live in?” Created by artist Ben McPherson, this Orem, Utah theme park promises to transport visitors into a “Quantum Veil,” which is a fancy way of saying “cloud room with lava rocks.” It’s got secret codes, interactive walls, and the promise of constant updates so you’ll keep coming back—because who doesn’t want a subscription service for escapism? The grand finale? A Star Wars-inspired sci-fi pub where you can sip on your beverage while robots remind you that humans peaked with indoor theme parks. Just remember, the more you spend, the cooler your next visit will be, so no pressure or anything.
Events Are Cooler Now, and You’re Not Invited
If you’ve ever wondered how 2025’s event trends could make your life simultaneously more tech-savvy and socially awkward, here’s the rundown: AI will turn even your lamest PowerPoint into a TED Talk, Gen Z will demand we stop using single-use anything, and sustainability is no longer just for tote bags. Events will focus on “authenticity,” meaning you’ll pay extra to feel like the corporate handshake is heartfelt. And don’t forget the live-streamed FOMO—because nothing says “modern bonding” like team-building karaoke and tailgate parties for award shows you don’t care about. BizBash (9 minutes)
Live from New York, It’s… You!
Have you ever dreamed of stepping into Studio 8H, shouting, “Live from New York!” while imagining Lorne Michaels looking begrudgingly impressed?? Well, NBCUniversal and NVE Experience Agency have made it possible for you to pretend you’re the star of Saturday Night Live without actually bombing in front of millions!? You’ll walk through famous sets, wave awkwardly at the Weekend Update desk, and feel like a star—just without the weekly existential dread of trying to write 90 minutes of comedy in six days. Think of it as comedy camp for people who can’t be trusted with live TV.
Scoops up, peeps! The The SNL Immersive Experience will run from January 30th to February 2nd at Rockefeller Center. Reservations are free and required for entry. Make yours here.
A Nature and teamLab Collab in Higashi Osaka
Nestled in Higashi Osaka, teamLab Inc.’s "Field of Wind, Rain, and Sun" transforms a former industrial site into a glowing, magical landscape where nature is the ultimate performance artist, and we’re all just lucky enough to buy tickets. Here, the rain doesn’t just fall—it transforms into shimmering constellations; sunlight doesn’t just shine—it stages flawless rainbow productions; and the wind isn’t content to blow—it scribbles luminous patterns like an overly enthusiastic calligraphy student. It’s art that will make you think, “I should really stop complaining about the weather—it’s way more creative than I am.”
Scoops up, peeps! This permanent exhibition is open only to visitors of the “A Cafe in the Field of the Can Can Factory”. You can find more information here.
Faerie Noir is the New Black
And now, a shameless plug:
Step into The Lost Inn, where Jenny McAllister, Sydney Lozier, Zach Fish and the entire crew at 13th Floor, have transformed Non Plus Ultra's San Francisco Mint into a twisted love letter to 1930s detective novels, Irish folklore, and creepy carnival vibes. With mossy taverns, eerie vaults, and a fortune-telling stand that may or may not curse you, this immersive show asks, “What happens to a building when it stops mattering?” The Experientialists is so proud to support this breathtaking production, born in part from our belief that, in a world of banks and bucks, the best experiential art deserves a chance to thrive—even if the main currency it produces is awe. SF Chronicle (5 minutes)
Scoops up, folks! The Lost Inn / Immersive Dark Faerie Noir runs January 23-February 1, 2025 at The San Francisco Mint Building. Get tix here.
Let's Dive Deeper Together
Hey there, we are Lou Pizante and Maria S Redin, co-founders of The Experientialists and the curious minds behind our mothership newsletter: "The Experientialist." This newsletter is our playground, a place where art, technology, commerce and culture dance together. But it's not just about what we have to say – it's about sparking conversations, learning from each other, and growing our collective knowledge.
We are always on the lookout for fascinating new experiences, innovative ideas, and intriguing perspectives. If you've got a story, a project, or a brainwave that you're itching to share, or if you're just keen to chat about the latest in immersive art/entertainment or groundbreaking tech, we're all ears.
Why not reach out? Let's connect and explore these fascinating intersections together. Drop us a message at [email protected] and let's see where our conversation takes us. And please follow us on LinkedIn. We are looking forward to hearing from you!
Led module & led screen supplier at Shenzhen Brighter Optical & Electrical Technology Co., Ltd.
3 周Thank you for your invitation!
Administrator at the Lumonics School of Light Art + Co-Producer of Lumonics Immersed + Co-Archivist at the Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery. All life is an experiment. The more experiments you make the better. - Emerson
1 个月I enjoy these newsletters so much!