What do you get when you cross a celebrated international art gallery with 400 Japanese technology artists and set them loose in a sprawling former Telsa dealership in Silicon Valley? You get Living Digital Space and Future Parks, a eye-popping, mind-expanding exhibition that skips the velvet ropes and instead encourages visitors to interact with the art and with each other. Read on to find out why the new teamLab exhibition at Pace Gallery in Menlo Park is a must-visit for families.

A Digital Playground for All Ages
Chase hundreds of butterflies around the room, watch as digital flowers respond to human touch and even play a futuristic game of hopscotch in a babbling river. This new exhibition, which opened February 6, includes 20 immersive digital installations, many of which were created specifically for children. The 20,000-square-foot gallery, which is housed in the former Tesla dealership, was given a moody makeover for this show: the walls, ceilings and floors were all painted black, creating the perfect canvas for the multi-sensory light show.

 

Hundreds of nearly invisible projectors and motion detectors fill every room, allowing the ever-changing art works to respond to visitors’ movements and touch, thanks to complex algorithms developed by the artists. The technological wizardry is on full display in the family sections, where kids are encouraged to design digital cities, bring ancient characters to life with a touch of their hands and set their own artistic creations loose in a digital sea.

About the Artists…All 400 of Them
teamLab is a Japanese artists’ collective made up of “ultra-technologists” who seek to navigate the confluence of art, technology, design and the natural world. Pace Art + Technology is the first to bring this exhibition to the US, after a highly successful run in Tokyo.  Every experience in Future Parks is the result of a complex algorithms that both mimics and riffs off nature. Digital butterflies scurry in response to human touch, flower petals fall of the blossom if shaded for too long and cities in constant motion morph as children move colorful building blocks from one place to another.

And unlike the solitary video game experience, each environment was designed to encourage collaboration with other visitors. A huge vibrant seascape teems with sea life designed by visitors big and small: After coloring in analog fish and squid with good old Crayolas, each drawing is scanned and “set loose” inside the sea, where it will stay through out the remainder of the exhibition.

Download Instructions
Living Digital Space and Future Parks at Pace Art + Technology in Menlo Park opened on February 6 with a celebratory Community Day that was attended by some of tech’s biggest and brightest families (the Zuckerburgs were there with little Max, among others).

It runs through July 1, and tickets are already going fast, as it’s proving to be a social media sensation on par with LACMA’s The Rain Room. The gallery is open Tuesday–Sunday, 11 a.m.–7 p.m. and you can get your tickets here. Kids 2 and under are free, and there are also student and senior discount available.

Pace Art + Technology
300 El Camino Real
Menlo Park, Ca
When: Feb. 6–July 1, 2015
Cost: $20/adult; $15/students and seniors with ID; $10/children 3-13; FREE/2 and under
Tickets: eventbrite.com/e/teamlab

Have you experienced the Future Parks exhibit? Tell us about it in the comments below! 

-Erin Feher

The uplifting video of a police officer teaching a young girl how to play hopscotch has gone viral. Huntington Beach Police Department posted a video last week of Officer Pricer displaying his playground knowledge. An officer at the scene was called due to a suspicious occupied vehicle. The officer soon learned that it was a mother and her daughter living out of their car. As housing accommodations were being made, Officer Pricer thought it would be best to bring a some smiles to the daughters face. Way to go Officer Pricer & HBPD!

Photo & video courtesy of Huntington Beach Police Department via Facebook

What was your favorite playground game? Tell us in the comments below!

Rise and shine and for today’s challenge: complete all of the games and activities below. Can you jump to the task?

1. Jump Rope
Whip out that jump rope and see how many times your kids can jump without messing up. Already conquered jumping rope? Try hopping on one foot or if you have at least three people and two ropes see if you can master double dutch.

2. Leap Frog
We bet you remember this game! Position one person on all fours on the ground. Leap over that person spreading your legs like a frog. If you have more than two people playing, keep leaping until you reach the front of the line, and then land in a crouched position covering your head on the floor. Start the game over with the last person in line starting the leaping. (Right about now, you’re wishing you’d stuck with that yoga class).

3. Long Jump
Cut five 12-inch long pieces of duct tape. Position each on the ground parallel to each other about 5 inches apart. Have your kiddo stand behind the first piece of tape and ask her to jump. Measure how far she makes it. Too easy? Move the pieces of tape so they are farther apart.

4. Hippity Hop Obstacle Course
Practice his motor and coordination skills by taking a soft foam ball and putting it between his knees while standing. Have your kiddo hop around with the ball between his legs to different parts of your living room. Can he hop to the couch without dropping the ball? How about leaping to touch the TV?

5. Hopscotch
Take a piece of chalk and draw a hopscotch game on your sidewalk, driveway or an empty school playground. Even without chalk, you can still outline hopscotch on the snow with sticks, rocks or even food coloring.

6. Stair Hop
Keeping your feet close together hop up a short flight of stairs, one stair at a time. Sounds easy, but you’ll soon find it’s quite a challenge to keep up the pace. Hop back down. See who can complete the most stairs.

What games do you play that require jumping and leaping? Did you complete all of ours? Leave a comment below!

photo: Jose Maria Cuellar via flickr 

Hopscotch. Hide and seek. Rollerskating. Bicycling. The way you play after school may change every day, but your shoes don’t have to. PLAE sneaks are the perfect sidekicks for all of the activities you do after the bell rings. Click through our album to check out some cool looks and count on these kicks to conquer your mightiest feats!

Classic & Carefree

Jamie rocks an Old Navy classic tee, Ralph Lauren cotton chino pants and a LEGO Minifig 3D backpack. His PLAE shoes are the Roan style in all-over black.

Want to buy your own PLAE shoes for hours of after-school fun? Head over to goplae.com and check out the selection. And let us know which styles you love in the Comments below!

After witnessing her Mom’s struggle with breast cancer at a young age, Keely—a fitness and wellness specialist and owner of Be Grand Fitness—turned that experience into a mission of healthy food, appropriate exercise and a balanced life.

We’re teaming up with Blue Shield of California to celebrate local Bay Area moms who have inspired us to seek healthy, balanced lives.  First up: Keely Grand of Be Grand Fitness.

Red Tricycle:  You’re part of a group of moms that are on a serious mission.  What’s yours?
Keely Grand: My main mission is to combat childhood obesity. I believe that the majority of the work and responsibility lies with the parents. I love working with different types of people with all types of abilities, but families are at the top of my list.

RT:  What inspired you to pursue health, fitness and fighting childhood obesity?
KG:  It was a combination of things: my mom getting breast cancer, my dad being a runner himself, my mom’s constant efforts to feed us the healthiest food, seeing unfit people get diseases that can be prevented with good health and going through my master’s program – health communication.

RT:  I take it your kids are a big part of what you do?
KG: My kids work with me. My oldest has been my exercise buddy since he was a baby. He’s come to classes with me from 3 months old and up until he went to preschool. My little guy is just 7 months old, and seems to enjoy it all too. Food is another aspect of my passion and my son is right there with me. We make kale smoothies together and go shopping for healthy food.

RT:  I bet your preschooler has said some pretty funny things as your exercise buddy, right?
KG: One time we were doing squat jumps and I was counting backwards and he yelled “Blast off!” when I got to 1. It stuck. Three years later, every time we do a jumping exercise with a backwards countdown we all yell “Blast off!”

RT:  What advice would you give to families that a more healthy lifestyle?
KG: Participate in any activity you can with your child. The joy in their entire being is priceless. Even if its 10 minutes of chase, dribble or bike riding after school or work, show your children that exercise can be fun and that you enjoy fitness with them.

Be Like Keely!  Blue Shield of California’s Wellness Challenge:
Purchase a resistance band if you want to work your muscles, a stroller if you want to walk or run with your child, chalk if you want to play hopscotch with your preschooler, the list is endless. You can burn a ton of calories by just playing chase and they’ll love every second of it!

Blue Shield of California is an independent member of the Blue Shield of California.