Please click here to view the video.
It is from the 2017 installation, but the message is the same for 2023 and beyond.
Please click here to view the video. It is from the 2017 installation, but the message is the same for 2023 and beyond. Some images in other...
The fairy shrimp were planted atop two hills overlooking the Central Basin of Middle Tennessee.
They can see for miles and miles from their new position, and hopefully can be seen from far away as well!
On my calendar I have made a note that this is "Hell time", based on an annual circumstance of stressful events that seem to happen about this time of year. Although I'm referring to personal things it seems Hell has expanded to a global significance this year. Fires, hurricanes, wars, floods, excessive heat... But honestly it's not just this time of year. Hell is happening all the time somewhere.
Fairy shrimp are now created by batch processing (cutting, sewing, rodding...) instead of individually.
1. Cutting:
2. "Eyelash" filling:
3. Sewing (While Mom looks on and wonders how I keep from sewing my fingers together)
4. Gluing on the googly eyes!
5. Cutting the individual phyllopods.
Some surviving members of the 2017 brood danced in the 2023 "Bell Buckle RC Moonpie Parade".
Since the community event was celebrating somewhat esoteric commodities (RC Colas and Moon Pies) there was not an emphasis on Burning Man, just FUN and Fairy Shrimp!
The design modifications are incorporated into the prototype for the 2.0 version.
There is some sacrifice of biologically oriented detail to reduce the amount of material waste and add a little personality to them.
This fellow is from the 2017 fairy shrimp family. He is the test subject for rigging and structural experimentation (and hopefully improvement) before construction of the new versions commences.
Progress is summarized here, and more than anyone really needs (except for me with my fading memory) is dumped here.
Construction has begun on the new "school" of fairy shrimp.
A loose documentation of the progress may be found by clicking
here.
Man, this is all too wonderful!