Art I Made in Q4–2022
There was just one big art, which ran at the end of November. Then I slipped in a couple little ones. I spent the last week of the year on a flooring project which will not be covered here!
Sometimes I wonder if there are better things I could be doing with my time, but then I think seriously about it, and decide there are not.
During this period, I deployed and refined lots of formulas. Custom printed board games, papier mache dolls, paper lanterns, pinatas, stickers, and hats. I think most of the learning during this process was about people, what they want, and how to get them to make each other really happy.
Biltmore Area Trash Services
This was a project for a very nice immersive art event that lets us take over entire hotel rooms to exhibit in. The idea here was to copy the branding from Bay Area Traffic Solutions but run a Trash Services operation that had a quiet side-cult about the bats that live there too. It turns out this has substantial overlap with Carlsbad cavern, which has been strewn with trash and full of bats for a long time!
Curb Appeal
The Cave
Trash garlands are actually a bit hard to make. First, you need visually compelling trash, not just arugula boxes or old egg cartons. To look like trash, snack packaging and disposable cups are more visually compelling. Then you have to drill a hole through each item and run a string through them all, adding some knots in the middle so things don’t all just hang at the bottom.
Decor
Interactivity
Overall, the BATS project was very good. It was a great room and switched from “must see weird room” to “excellent chillout chamber” over the time of the event. Usually, our projects are ready to go at event start and have no line to visit. Most projects open late and have flow issues, so that even by the last night not everyone has seen them who wanted to. This seems to be a persistent trend and we could probably figure out a way to be more strategic in using this reality.
We had a strong team and did a good job organizing some work nights to get more done. Trash garlands were really quite a slog, but they had a huge impact, giving a trashy context to every other piece.
Fish Cart Again
The fish cart was a project from the previous year, but it now lives permanently in Sophie’s yard. So, for her house party, I decided to reactivate it. Once you have a bin of fish props in storage anyway, these things seem reasonable to run for a one-night house party.
This is Fine Cafe
Sophie and I collaborated on this one for a psychedelic Christmas party. Here, we took over an entire bedroom, put up our cardboard flats, then served coffee, cookies, and booze! What a nice time.
We later reused the This is Fine cafe concept at several future events.
Chairs
Conclusions
This was the end of a very beautiful post-COVID summer and our art crew was doing great. I’m glad I had the chance to do this wonderful art with lots of eager friends! Really, we overproduced given the commitment we signed up for, but I started noticing at this point that productivity is my “super power.” The work we did after this was even more staggering, so I’m glad we did all this and efficiently reused many component parts.
It turns out the Bat Facts never did get thrown away. I see them at the homes of many of my collaborators! Sometimes we make art for ourselves.