Stephen Hawking said it would end in spaghettification, but at the Marshmallow Laser Feast show opening at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image in Melbourne, it could just end in more dancing.
The world-premiere exhibition, titled Works of Nature, aims to use video technology on a grand scale to inspire a sense of awe about natural phenomena people may never see for themselves.
Works of Nature is the first major exhibition in Australia for UK art group Marshmallow Laser Feast.
Works of Nature features five large scale digital artworks, with Evolver, for example, making the act of breathing into a visual journey connected to the entire cosmos.
If that's not enough, it's narrated by Cate Blanchett.
The artists also travelled to the Amazon to study massive trees and record their sounds, to develop immersive videos showing how water travels through their root system.
Marshmallow Laser Feast consults with scientists during its research for each artwork.
Marshmallow Laser Feast hopes the show will spark a sense of awe about the unity of life, said one of the group's directors, Ersin Han Ersin.
"You can feel your connectedness to the deep ends of the galaxy, and to the trees in the Amazon, even if you've never seen one," he told AAP.Â
Another installation explains the science of black holes, with a massive screen displaying an interactive video, showing the journey from a nebula to the event horizon of a black hole.
Marshmallow Laser Feast hopes its show will spark a sense of awe about the unity of life.
It's the first major exhibition in Australia for the British art group, which has exhibited around the world.
The collective consults with scientists during its research for each artwork, and there's extensive information explaining the science behind the pieces, and the technology used to make them.
Marshmallow Laser Feast: Works of Nature is on at ACMI from Friday till April 14, 2024.