Showing posts with label Aspen Ideas Festival 2014. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aspen Ideas Festival 2014. Show all posts

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Airbnb and Aspen Ideas Festival, letter to the editor 2014

I'm posting some old letters to the editor. This is so I can remember what I wrote, and to keep myself honest.  I'm posting them in the order I wrote them so this goes back a couple of years.

The more things change….

Summer 2014

We are surrounded by genius. Genius to the right of us. Genius to the left of us. Genius in front of us.

Sooooo, no renting your "affordable" couch? Airbnb is baaaaaad, baaaad, baaaad. Someone might make a few extra bucks and someone else might visit Aspen for under $100 a night. Right, because we don't want to have people who live here earning too much money and we only want people to visit here with tons of money. Got it. Genius. Bloody perfect genius.

Meanwhile back  at City Hall… we have lip service being paid to "affordable lodging" through the same old permitting carrot and stick FAR TDR WTF are you thinking 20th century "go fish" for your permit trading cards. Seriously, if you don't know what FAR and TDR mean- be thankful, very thankful- these are anachronisms we use to regulate growth instead of, oh I don't know, keeping up with the rest of the world???.

If any member of City Government (or the Chamber for that matter) had listened to Brian Chesky's talk at the Aspen Ideas Festival they would have heard how airbnb is reaching out to local governments and partnering with them to insure regulations are being met,  insure lodging associations  and landlords are being supported, and working to give a "give back" button to donate directly into the City coffers. Fortunately for us, KJAX has the podcast
  "Airbnb: How the Sharing Economy is Redefining the Marketplace and Our Sense of Community"

Okay, end of airbnb rant, but not the rant about our local government. I saw no one from local government at the Aspen Ideas Festival listening to the "Metropolis" track or any of the "Civic Engagement" panels, listening to Jennifer Pahlka talk about "Code for America" or Larry Lessig pleading for the;SuperPac to end SuperPacs. Is no one in local City Government interested in learning how representative democracy is evolving in the rest of the globe? All you had to do was ride the bike a wee bit farther, to the Meadows. No "the dog ate my homework" excuses allowed this is one darn big event for our small town and it's part of the job- both as ambassadors and representatives.

The world came to us last week and we didn't ride out to greet them. Dope slap. Biiiiiiiig dope slap.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Aspen Ideas 2014

In January Kitty Boone contacted me about designing something special for the Aspen Ideas Festival's 10th anniversary. She wanted something for the entrance to Paepcke Auditorium.

Cool! Yep, I jumped on the chance, I love my home town of Aspen and Aspen Ideas is tailor made for the polymaths amongst us.  Perfect.

This would turn into much more of an Art Installation than a Scene Design. 

For the 10th year there was a new logo design from Infinia Group


new  logo
old logo


I loved the new logo and thought it would be great to "riff" off of that. So I came up with a few ideas:



The idea was to line the entryway with "people size" logos which would be sleeved in a white spandex. These would be lit from below with color changers and the negative spaces in the logo would be filled with mirror. The mirror would have quotes from the past 9 years.

Kitty wanted to see a prototype so that's what we did. Dimension Design has done fabulous work for me in the past and they can sew spandex into some pretty intricate shapes. The logo may look simple but ask any stitcher- getting a smooth fitting on that shape- not so easy.

The prototype arrived in April.


As much as I liked the look, I was even more impressed by the welded frame.



Kitty liked it too. She picked up a piece of blue cellophane wrapping and held it in front of the leaf. As the blue shadows fell on the sidewalk, "What if we could have it like this?"

Colors like the logo inset into the frame? Like stained glass? Great idea!  (Difficult, pricey, but a great idea.)



That's the fun, Design is a collaborative process or as Amanda Boxtel put it in her presentation at this year's conference Design is "co-creation"


Now there were a few problems, like that pesky thing called gravity and it's equally pesky parent physics.  Aspen Ideas has a history of reusing design elements and changing the colors on their logo so I wanted to make these stable enough for the 10 day event and removable if the colors changed for next year. 

The two big questions were 
1."Do the right colors of plexiglas exist?"
2. "Can I find a way to make it float inside the frame?"

The biggest choice for plexi colors came from Solter and I could also get the plexi pieces cut at JetSets.


Better yet 3 of these were "neon plexi" which gives a hot neon glow edge. That made it even more important to get some air around the plexi inside the frame.


"Will it stick?" First I tried a little clear silicone: clamping it in place with PVC until the silicone had set. That worked on a small sample and gave me enough confidence to go ahead with the project.


Eight new leaf frames were ordered and I started on the R&D process in my studio. Did I mention that I was both Designer and Scenic on this? Well, I didn't plan it that way but that's what the deadline will do. I don't like to do both on a show, I use different neurons for these tasks and sometimes changing lanes becomes challenging.

Forty-two plexi inserts in each leaf, nine leaves 378 pieces of plexi and one week of build time. 

While waiting for shipments to arrive I experimented with different methods of making the process faster: A "negative" of the leaf which would hold each piece of plexi in the right position while I glued seemed like a good plan.


The plexi arrived before the 8 leaves 


so I started working on the prototype:


This didn't work. The glue wasn't stiff enough and made quite a mess.



There wasn't enough uniformity in the leaves either. I won't bore you with all the other failures but you should know that this is a process. You try something, you fail, you learn, you try something else. 

The crates with 8 leaves arrived. That's the big difference between Entertainment Industry Design and just about every other type of Design. We have deadlines which do not move. The tickets have been sold and there is no excuse. Opening is opening.


The best solution was taping the plexi in place while the leaves were standing.

There's a  famous story about John D. Rockerfeller. The kerosene kegs were sealed with 40 drops of solder and John D. asked if they could do it with 38. Thirty-eight drops of solder leaked, 39 did not. 

I tried using silicone around all 4 sides and the neon lost a lot of it's glow. 

Then I "tabbed" the 4 corners with silicone

39 drops of solder:  piping Crystalgel on the short sides only.
 (it's stronger than silicone)
Crystalgel is thick enough to pipe and a quick wipe with a rubber smoothing tool will keep it clean.

39 drops of solder- pop out the silicone tabs leave the crystal gel…

Repeat.
Repeat again
and again

Late on Saturday night Allan Trumpler (who happened to be in town painting for John Kasarda's production of Eugene Onegin at the Aspen Music School) and I put the leaves in their crates. Monday at 7am the truck arrived. 

The load-in for Aspen Ideas is one day. 


It did not go without incident. I made a huge mistake trying to place the leaves before driving rebar stakes into the ground. Up came the wind down went the leaves. I reglued a lot of these on the spot. That's another reason for bringing everything with you in the "kit". 

Here you see the mirror pieces reflecting onto the sidewalk
The prototype went into the Doerr-Hosier building since it couldn't be secured outside.
Even inside "stained glass" effect seemed to be work well.

It gave a festive feel from many angles.

Ten days later the crates are back in the shop. 

Will the "stained glass leaves" come back next year?

No idea. 

I just know I have some plans for making them better if they do.