EEPMON is featured in the print issue of National Geographic Japan (April, 2026).

The feature explores his “High-Tech, High-Touch” philosophy, specifically highlighting:
∙ The Weather Art Generator: A new work that visualizes and converges real-time weather data from Ottawa and Tokyo, creating a living digital bridge between the two cities.
∙ Canadian Census Data Art: The generative piece Constellations, created during his residency at Library and Archives Canada and showcased at the Canada Pavilion during Expo 2025 Osaka.
The publication coincides with EEPMON’s solo exhibition, Digital Worlds, currently on display at the Embassy of Canada to Japan’s Prince Takamado Gallery in Tokyo through May 12, 2026. Special thanks to the Embassy’s public affairs team, the editorial team at Nikkei BP, and National Geographic for highlighting these algorithmic and data-driven creations that explore human narrative and sustainability.
The works discussed in this feature are available for public viewing in Tokyo until May 12, 2026.

About the National Geographic Japanese Edition
National Geographic Japanese Edition is the Japanese language edition of the world-renowned National Geographic magazine that was launched in 1888 in the United States. National Geographic magazine, now published 33 local-language editions, covers the “unknown facts of the earth” that relate to nature, adventure, history, global environment, science and culture. Its beautiful photography, shot by prominent photographers, and its in-depth stories are ardently supported by numerous readers around the world. The Japanese edition was launched in April 1995 and its subscribers cover a wide age group from small children to the senior generation.



