Let every LIFE shine
RE-EXPERIENCE BIRTH with this planetarium program

This program fully utilises the benefits of the planetarium dome
to not only see but to experience the miracle of the universe and our lives.
"LIFE Re-experience birth with this planetarium program"
has been selected for
Fulldome Festival Brno 2021
Europe's largest full dome festival
&
IPS 2020 conference
The world's largest planetarium international competition

Take an emotional journey to follow the birth of the universe, the stars and our lives.
01
Re-experience birth.
Why? What does it mean to
“re-experience birth” at planetarium?
The space of the planetarium
theatre gives sense of comfort.
That is because we all have felt it before
and is engraved deeply in our memories.
The warmth and sense of security
That takes us back to
when we were in our mother’s womb.
The theatre’s 360 degrees screen completely envelopes you in the film creating the perfect space to recreate the warmth
and sense of security we felt in our mother’s womb.
In this program,
we travel from the birth of the universe,
to the birth of our lives to acknowledge we are all part of the same universe.
02
First in the world!
The world renowned science photographer, Lennart Nilsson’s images of an embryo in uterus screened at planetarium theatre for the first time
in the world!
His images have a remarkable resemblance to the universe and capture a sense of cosmology
in human life.
The world’s first planetarium program
showing his incredible work.
You may think its computer graphic,
but he captured the breathtaking
beauty of human life.
Lennart Nilsson
Lennart Nilsson was a renowned Swedish photographer, scientist and amongst the first modern photojournalists. He was in a unique position as an educator with a camera. He has been compared to the universal genius Leonardo da Vinci.
He achieved international fame in 1965, when his photographs of the embryo appeared on the cover of Life magazine. His book A Child is Born was published in the same year
and translated into 20 different languages.
Lennart Nilsson received an Honorary Doctorate in Medicine, and Philosophy He won the Swedish Academy Nordic Authors’ Prize, the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences’ Big Gold Medal in 1989, and in 2002 received the 12th presentation of the Swedish government’s Illis Quorum.
He won the Swedish Academy Nordic Authors’ Prize,
the first Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (in 1980),
and received “Master of Phtography”.
His documentaries won Emmy awards three times,
and other awards from World Press Photo.
Since 1997, the Lennart Nilsson Award has been presented in recognition of extraordinary photography of science and is sponsored by the Lennart Nilsson Foundation.
He passed away on 28th January, 2017.
