quantum | inside anyma’s universe

In Anyma‘s world, the dance floor becomes a living story. The Italian electronic artist, Matteo Milleri, has been revolutionising the techno scene for over 15 years by merging spectacle and storytelling with technology. His immersive live experiences have trailblazed a new dimension in the nightlife landscape through cinematic performances that guide revellers into a mythical space of soaring visuals, awe-inspiring locations and colossal stages, including Sphere in Las Vegas, making him the first DJ to headline the venue. 

Anyma first made his mark as one half of the duo Tale of Us, manifesting his vision through their epochal event series Afterlife. Simultaneously, he has cultivated an avant-garde niche defined by audiovisual experimentation using sound and AI. Now, the visionary is unveiling his Quantum era. If past chapters pushed the limits, Quantum shatters them and propels nightlife into realms unimagined. The live concept is a futuristic evolution of Anyma’s odyssey where theatrics, digital creatures and ethereal melodies collide.

And where better to reveal this new horizon than in a space engineered to expand the very boundaries of night culture? [UNVRS] Ibiza, the world’s first hyperclub, hosted Quantum this summer. Anyma’s eight-week long residency featured special guest appearances from the the likes of Travis Scott, Adriatique, Solomun and Amelie Lens. In an interview with Schön!, Anyma reflects on the experience and delves deep into the Quantum ethos. 

Congratulations on your Ibiza residency at [UNVRS]. How does it feel to bring your world to life in a venue that’s pushing the boundaries of nightlife?

Thank you. It’s pretty surreal. Ibiza has been a very special place throughout my life and career. Going into [UNVRS] allowed me to create something closer to the experience I’d always imagined. [It] felt like a natural extension of the world we’ve been building through music, visuals, and technology. 

How does a space like [UNVRS] allow you to fully express your creative vision?

[UNVRS] gives me the freedom to dissolve the line between reality and the digital realm. It’s a space built for transformation visually, sonically, and emotionally. Their technology allowed me to bring the show to life with the idea of a collective experience where the audience becomes part of the Quantum system, part of the story. Opening the shutters at sunrise every Tuesday was a personal highlight for me.

In your eyes, what does a futuristic venue like [UNVRS] indicate for the evolution of live music?

A venue like [UNVRS] signals a continued shift in how we experience music. I see it as the next step in the evolution of live music, a less linear experience, far more immersive.

You’ve launched your new era, Quantum, through this residency, what does it represent for you and how is it manifesting within these shows?

Quantum was a concept that I premiered at Sphere Las Vegas as the next chapter after the Genesys concept. Hence, why the show was called “The End Of Genesys.” This new Quantum idea is derived from quantum computing and breakthroughs in AI which I find deeply inspirational. Quantum is not just a show–it’s the evolution of the world I’ve been building. 

How would you describe the dimension you’re inviting people into when they experience Quantum for the first time?

When people experience Quantum for the first time, I want them to reimagine humanity and reality. More than anything, Quantum suggests a blend, an alliance, between the digital and the physical. Together with the audiovisual experience of this show, we are inviting the audience to experience a fractured perception of an alternative future reality.

The visual avatars in your shows have become part of your performance identity. What role do they play in the storytelling?

In the live show, they’re not just visual effects. They’re characters in an unfolding narrative that continues to evolve with each show and each body of music and art. By externalising these characters, we invite the audience not just as spectators, but as participants in the narrative.

How do you see AI-generated visuals shaping the trajectory of immersive shows and the live music experience?

In live music and story building, AI is efficient for creative manifestation and quickly moves ideas from concept to execution. As a tool, it can enhance the speed at which stories are visualised, but ultimately, an artist’s imagination and storytelling will remain the driving force. Nothing can replicate that.

You embody the intersection of music, art and technology, where do you find inspiration for the visual realm you’re building?

The visual realm I’ve been building is inspired by the tension between nature and technology. I am fascinated by the relationship that exists between these entities and I draw inspiration from science fiction, architecture, art, and nature. Collaborating with visual artists and machine intelligence allows our ideas to manifest in ways that feel alive, even sentient. The goal isn’t just to create something intriguing and beautiful, but an alternative reality that reflects our collective questions about what it means to be human in a post-human world. 

photography. Nicko Guihal
talent. Anyma
words. Sarah Diab