Reality has boundaries. Infinity Museum doesn’t.

Located at Boulevard Mall with a convenient entrance from outside, this immersive museum gives you the sensation of existing outside the laws of physics. If you’re familiar with the work of Yayoi Kusama, the legendary Japanese artist who has spent decades exploring infinity through mirrors, then you’ll recognize the DNA here.

Infinity Museum has seven installations, each one a collaboration with artists from around the globe. (Through Dec. 31, 2025, spring for the VIP ticket and you’ll get special glasses that reveal Christmas trees materializing in the endless reflections.)

After slipping on the required booties to protect the reflective floors, you move through the installations sequentially, but you can go back to any room as many times as you want. Some people zip through in 30 minutes. Others—like the family I saw sprawled on the floor, laughing and taking photos from every conceivable angle—linger longer. This is absolutely a place you can bring kids, family or a date.

Each of the seven installations offers its own portal to infinity:

• Stargazing is a dreamlike room that simulates the vastness of the universe. With mirrors that create depth that doesn’t exist, the stars here feel endless, as if you’re swimming in an infinite galaxy. (Use those glasses to spot Christmas trees floating in space.)

• Sphere Symphony constructs its infinity through perfectly placed spheres that seem to extend in every direction. There are loose spheres—giant balloons that magically change colors—on the ground that you can play with and bounce across the walls, creating a delightfully immersive playground that brings out the kid in all of us.

• The Mirrored Dodecahedron—the world’s first walk-in version of this complex 12-faced shape—is a jewel box of geometric wonder. Every angle offers a new composition, a new way of seeing yourself fractured across infinite transformations.

If you’ve been missing the fleeting northern lights that have made appearances across the U.S., just step into Aurora Reverie. This room surrounds you with waves of colors that dance like a celestial light show. With the Christmas displays, it’s even more magical. Lie down on the floor and watch as snowflakes and twinkling lights rain down on you. If you’ve ever wondered what it feels like being inside a snow globe, now you’ll know.

In the Wormhole, set aside 20 minutes to watch the show, which transports you across the universe’s past, present and future. This is as close as you’re going to get to experiencing one.

My favorite is the Mirror Maze, which challenges your sense of perception. Inside this labyrinth of reflective surfaces, you’re given a pool noodle to poke the walls, figuring out which surfaces are mirrors and which are open space that you can walk through. It’s a geometric adventure unlike anything else you’ve ever experienced.

End your tour in Four Seasons, the world’s largest walk-in kaleidoscope, which interprets spring, summer, fall and winter in all their mirrored glory. Walking through is trippy and disorienting in the best possible way.

The holiday displays run through the end of 2025, which means there’s still time to step out of regular reality and into something stranger, more beautiful, more infinite.

3568 S. Maryland Parkway, Ste. 177. infinitymuseum.com

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