top of page

Brazil Pavilion at Expo Osaka a living, breathing masterpiece

  • Writer: BT
    BT
  • 1 day ago
  • 3 min read
Brazil Pavilion at Expo Osaka a living, breathing masterpiece
The Brazil Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka is designed to offer a full-on experience for your senses.
OSAKA, JAPAN, 8 September 2025 – The Brazil Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka invites you for an experience that stays with you long after your visit. And if you’re heading to Expo 2025 Osaka, this is one stop you absolutely shouldn’t miss.

The Brazil Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka is designed to offer a full-on experience for your senses. It blends culture, sustainability, and creativity in a way that feels fresh and human. Led by Brazilian set designer Bia Lessa, the pavilion was created to be welcoming to everyone. It meets high standards for accessibility and inclusion, making sure that every visitor feels at home.


Covering around 1,000 square metres and spread across two buildings, the pavilion offers something truly different. Instead of relying on flashy tech displays like many other national pavilions, Brazil’s space invites you to touch, move, and partake.


Inside, the pavilion is designed like a loop that flows and changes, just like life. It’s built with recyclable materials and features transparent walls that blur the line between indoors and outdoors. The whole place feels open, fluid, and alive.


The experience begins with an anti-exhibition, where visitors are guided through a performance made up of five symbolic acts. Each act is a chapter in a cycle of existence, and you’re part of it.


You begin in a quiet, softly lit space filled with translucent white inflatable sculptures. Some are small, others rise up to four metres tall. They gently expand and contract to mimic breath. These forms represent people, animals, and nature to remind us that everything is alive and connected.


Brazil Pavilion at Expo Osaka a living, breathing masterpiece
You begin in a quiet, softly lit space filled with translucent white inflatable sculptures. Some are small, others rise up to four metres tall.

As you move forward, the sculptures light up from within, glowing in radiant colours. LED rays sweep across the room, stitching together a sense of movement and unity. It feels like something is waking up inside you. Then, the colours fade back to white, and the light beams continue to pulse, signalling that everything is part of a larger whole.


Suddenly, the lights dim. The sculptures deflate. The room falls silent again. It’s a visual metaphor for crisis environmental, social, and emotional. There’s no narration, no explanation. Just a powerful sense that something precious is slipping away. It’s a call to act before it’s too late.


Then comes the sound of rain. A soft melody begins to rise. Slowly, the sculptures re-inflate. The light returns, warmer now. The space feels hopeful again. It reminds us that rebirth is possible but only if we move together, with care and intention.


The final act glows with soft light. The air feels charged, like it’s holding its breath. You’re invited to pause, reflect, and think not just about Brazil’s story, but your own. It’s a quiet moment of connection between past and future, between self and world.


In a second exhibition space, the Parangoromo Room, you’ll watch a short film that celebrates Brazil’s natural beauty, culture, and diversity. Then, you’re invited to wear colourful garments inspired by Brazil’s parangolés and Japan’s hagoromos. These are symbols of movement, freedom, and transformation. You can dance in them, pose in them, and even take them home. It’s Brazil’s way of sharing joy, and letting you carry it with you.


Brazil Pavilion at Expo Osaka a living, breathing masterpiece
The Parangoromo Room is a big hit with visitors at the Brazil Pavilion.

The third room is a 74m² space used for talks, exhibitions, and networking. Brazilian companies, institutions, and state governments host events here, from lectures and meetings to cultural showcases and business exchanges. It’s where Brazil’s commitment to sustainability and innovation comes to life.


Every part of the Brazil Pavilion is designed to be felt, not just seen. It’s a space that invites you to move, reflect, and reconnect with nature, with culture, and with each other, and it is one experience you won’t forget. If you’re planning your Expo route anywhere between now and Oct 13, make this pavilion a priority.





Top Stories

vol77-Adv.jpg

Community. Discovery. Potential. Sign up for an update on BorneoTalk.

Thanks for subscribing!

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • TikTok
  • Youtube

© 2024 by BorneoTalk. Powered and secured by Wix

bottom of page