Step into Dreamer, a brand-new indoor light festival landing at NZICC from Friday 3 April 2026. Explore interactive worlds of colour and light these school holidays, all under one roof in Tāmaki Makaurau.
A bright idea for the April school holidays has opened!
The April school holidays have arrived, and this time of year is notoriously known for unstable seasonal changes. The weather often shifts between sideways rain, sudden cold snaps, and brief moments of sunshine, which makes planning family activities feel unpredictable. Add to that the fuel prices that can send even the most resilient person into tears, and the idea of finding something affordable, accessible, and genuinely joyful for the whole whānau starts to feel like a rare luxury. Dreamer arrives as a light in the darkness. It is set inside the fresh and gleaming New Zealand International Convention Centre in the heart of Tāmaki Makaurau’s CBD. This indoor lighting extravaganza has been a year in the making and uses a floor area the size of Eden Park. Every part of the experience has been curated with you in mind. You are not a passive observer. You become an active participant from the moment you step inside. The shift from patron to participant happens before you even realise it.
At the opening, after a warm welcome from Ngāti Whātua and a waiata led by the very sparkly Suzy Cato and the tamariki present, a member of the design team shared their vision for this interactive masterpiece. They explained that the priority was to keep prices low and the event accessible to as many people as possible. Their overarching aim was to bring people together, to place strangers in the same space, to share a moment in time, to share in our humanity, and to realise that we are more alike than we are different. It is a simple idea, but once you step into the first glowing environment, you can feel that intention woven through the entire experience.
A quick briefing on how to use your provided headphones is given, along with the delightfully ambiguous instruction that when you see a coloured robot, you can switch between red and blue to hear their soundtrack. That is all the direction you receive, and somehow it is all you need. The world outside fades away, and this new world takes over. The music sets a vibe that encourages movement, regardless of age, ability, or confidence. Looking around, you can see the lights on other people’s headphones glowing red or blue, which reveals who is sharing the same soundtrack as you. It becomes a subtle and wordless way of connecting with strangers as you drift through wide open spaces designed with genuine accessibility in mind. Wheelchairs, pushchairs, and mobility needs are all considered, and the layout supports everyone.
Giving yourself permission to forget the outside world and dive into this new reality is seamless. It is also one of the best gifts you can give your inner child. Each new environment offers fresh interactive opportunities with the strangers you are sharing this incredible space with. There is something quietly powerful about watching people who have never met fall into the same rhythm, the same moment, and the same sense of play. Dreamer does not force connection. It simply creates the conditions where connection becomes the most natural thing in the world.
For me, Dreamer brought back memories of summer nights wandering through intimate art installations at well-known music festivals. Those were the rare pockets of time where art, sound, and atmosphere combined to create something larger than the sum of their parts. The music here leans into some of the coolest EDM tracks, and at times, I found myself smiling at how unexpectedly perfect they were for the space. Somewhere between the beats and the lights, I found a new appreciation for Tāmaki Makaurau. It is a city often associated with road cones and construction, yet here it proves it can host something imaginative, generous, and full of heart.
One of the most moving parts of the experience was watching kids lose themselves in the moment alongside their parents, and watching parents remember how to be kids. There is something incredibly tender about seeing adults shed the pressures of the outside world, even for a short time. We spend so much of our lives under constant pressure. Performance targets, unspoken rules, and the narrative that adulthood must look a certain way all weigh heavily on us. In all that noise, we lose the space to simply be present, to feel free, and to reconnect with the parts of ourselves we have tucked away. Dreamer hands that space back to you without asking for anything in return.
The moment that stayed with me the most was kneeling on the floor and gazing into the infinite kaleidoscope of the flower of life, the dodecahedron. Understanding its representation of creation, interconnectedness, unity, oneness, duality, the cycle of life, and the union of masculine and feminine energies created a sense of losing and finding myself at the same time. Then I looked to my left and saw tamariki not much older than two years old sharing that exact moment. They were equally mesmerised and equally present. That single moment captured the intent I believe Dreamer has set out to achieve. There is no hierarchy of experience here. There is no correct way to engage. There are only humans, big and small, encountering wonder together.
As you move deeper into the installation, the environments shift. Some are playful, some are contemplative, and some exist purely for joy. There are spaces where light behaves like water and shadows ripple around you. There are moments where the soundtrack syncs so perfectly with the visuals that you feel like you have stepped inside a music video. There are quieter corners where you can sit, breathe, and simply take in the glow. Every element feels intentional, yet never restrictive. Dreamer trusts you to find your own way through it, and that trust feels refreshing.
By the time you reach the final space, you realise something subtle but powerful has happened. You have shared smiles with strangers. You have danced without thinking about who might be watching. You have watched kids teach adults how to play again. You have stepped into a world built on light, colour, and curiosity, and stepped out feeling a little lighter yourself.
Dreamer is not just an event. It is a reminder. It reminds us that joy does not need to be complicated. Connection does not need to be orchestrated. Wonder is still accessible, even in a world that often feels heavy. Sometimes the most meaningful experiences are the ones that invite us to be fully present, fully human, and fully ourselves.
Dreamer blasts off on 3 April 2026 at the new New Zealand International Convention Centre (NZICC) in central Auckland until April 12. Book a time slot here
Review written by Josh McNally
Edited by Alex Moulton
Edited by Alex Moulton





























