Seoul Botanic Park’s AI exhibition focus for 2026 is part of 《Dear Balance: Reflecting Each Other》, a planned exhibition that opened on June 23, 2026 and runs through May 16, 2027. The key Magok Culture Tech angle is at Magok Cultural Center, where artist Gu Gi-jeong presents an immersive work that combines greenhouse plants from Seoul Botanic Park with virtual imagery through generative AI technology.1
Seoul Botanic Park AI Exhibition: What to See First

For visitors specifically interested in the AI component, the most direct stop is Magok Cultural Center. Seoul Botanic Park’s official opening notice identifies this venue as the site of Gu Gi-jeong’s section, titled “With a Slow Gaze,” while Seoul City describes the work as an immersive piece using generative AI to merge greenhouse plants with virtual images.21
The wider exhibition is not only a technology display. Its stated theme is the relationship and balance among nature, humans, and technology, which makes the AI work part of a broader cultural and ecological program rather than a standalone digital installation.1 That framing matters for planning a visit: the Magok Cultural Center section is best understood alongside the other exhibition spaces at Seoul Botanic Park, where installation art, sculpture, and media works are also presented.3
Several reports describe the Magok Cultural Center piece as immersive and based on generative artificial intelligence. The work brings together real botanical references from the park’s greenhouse and imagined digital imagery, making it the clearest match for visitors searching for an AI art experience in the Magok area.45
Dates, Hours, Venues, and Artists
The exhibition period is June 23, 2026 to May 16, 2027. Seoul City lists operating hours as 10:00 to 17:00, with closure every Monday.1 Because the exhibition is spread across multiple spaces, visitors should allow time to move between venues rather than treating it as a single-room show.
The official Seoul Botanic Park notice names four participating artists: Gu Gi-jeong, Eom A-rong, Lee Ji-yeon, and Jang Han-na.2 Yonhap News also describes the exhibition as including large sculpture, installation art, and media works by Gu Gi-jeong, Eom A-rong, Lee Ji-yeon, and Jang Han-na.3
The main exhibition spaces are Plant Culture Center Project Hall 2, the themed garden area, the greenhouse, and Magok Cultural Center.2 Seoul City’s release also identifies Plant Culture Center Project Hall 2, the greenhouse, the themed garden, and Magok Cultural Center as participating locations.1 This repeated venue information is useful because it confirms that the AI section is only one part of a four-space exhibition route.
Visitors who want a technology-focused route can start with Gu Gi-jeong’s Magok Cultural Center section, then continue to the other works that connect nature and technology in different ways. Viva2080 reports that the exhibition is organized into four sections and notes that Lee Ji-yeon’s Project Hall 2 work uses nanofilm, 3D printing, and algorithms in a light sculpture.6 The same report identifies Gu Gi-jeong’s Magok Cultural Center work as “All microorganisms move subtly in their own rhythm.”6
Seoul Botanic Park Director Park Su-mi described the exhibition as a chance for citizens to share “a new perspective and time for thought that can only be encountered at Seoul Botanic Park.”1 That statement matches the exhibition’s practical appeal: it is a cultural visit, but also a way to see how plant life, media art, and AI-based image-making are being placed in conversation.
How to Plan a Practical Visit
If your priority is the 서울식물원 AI 전시, put Magok Cultural Center at the center of the visit plan. That is the source-backed location for Gu Gi-jeong’s generative AI-based immersive work, and it is the section most directly connected to the Magok Culture Tech keyword.1
From there, decide whether to make the visit short or comprehensive. A short visit can focus on Magok Cultural Center and the AI work. A fuller visit should include Plant Culture Center Project Hall 2, the greenhouse, and the themed garden, since the exhibition is designed across those spaces and includes installation art, sculpture, and media works.23
The available source material confirms the dates, operating hours, weekly closure, participating spaces, artists, and the AI-based nature of the Magok Cultural Center work. It does not provide ticket prices, reservation steps, refund rules, or detailed transport instructions, so visitors should rely on the confirmed schedule details when planning and check the venue’s current visitor information before going.

Quick FAQ
When does the Seoul Botanic Park AI exhibition run?
The broader exhibition 《Dear Balance: Reflecting Each Other》 runs from June 23, 2026 to May 16, 2027. Seoul City lists hours as 10:00 to 17:00, with closure every Monday.1
Where is the AI artwork located?
The generative AI-based immersive work by Gu Gi-jeong is presented at Magok Cultural Center, as part of the multi-venue Seoul Botanic Park exhibition.21 For visitors looking for a focused culture-and-technology stop in Magok, the strongest source-backed choice is Gu Gi-jeong’s AI-linked section at Magok Cultural Center, then the rest of 《Dear Balance: Reflecting Each Other》 across Seoul Botanic Park’s exhibition spaces.
References
- 서울식물원, 기획전시 《다정한 균형: 서로를 비추는》 개막 (서울특별시 보도자료, 2026-06-24)
- [행사] 2026 서울식물원 기획전시 《다정한 균형: 서로를 비추는》 개막 안내 (서울식물원, 2026-06-17)
- 서울식물원, 2026 기획전 '다정한 균형' 내년 5월까지 개최 (연합뉴스, 2026-06-24)
- 서울식물원, 기획전시 ‘다정한 균형 서로를 비추는’ 개막 (환경과조경, 2026-06-24)
- 서울식물원, 자연·인간·기술 잇는 기획전 ‘다정한 균형’ 개최 (메가경제, 2026-06-24)
- 최첨단기술과 자연 그리고 인간이 어우러지는! 서울식물원의 ‘다정한 균형: 서로를 비추는’展 (비바2080, 2026-06-28)