http://www.thespacewhale.com/project/ |
I love what I do. For example, I just got
off the phone with Lindsay Adams, a guy with “a wide skill set,” as he puts it,
who is deeply involved in the creation of a life-sized humpback whale for this
year’s Burning Man. A degreed
electronics engineer, he has had a lot of hands-on experience in many fields
over the years, and says he’s more of a woodworker than a metal worker. Up
until a couple years ago, Adams was primarily involved in software development.
But in 2012, he signed on as technical director of The Generator in Sparks, Nev. The
Generator is a 34,000 square foot facility that provides free space, as well as
access to a host of hand tools and power equipment, for artists to use in creating whatsoever
they wish.
Adams is also the go-to guy for a new plasma cutting table,
provided earlier this summer by Torchmate as a beta test for
its new 4800 series equipment. The bottom line here is that these artists now
are using a top of the line piece of equipment, and because it’s so easy to
pick up, they’re not batting an eye at its capabilities. That’s a pretty good
acid test, if you ask me.
Anyway, Lindsay tells me his group’s Space Whale leaves on Sunday for
Burning Man, the once-a-year festival held in Black Rock City, Nev., a temporary
“metropolis city in the desert” some 120 miles north of Sparks.
But here’s one of the interesting little connections that
makes what I do so much fun, namely, the surprising things that emerge from
researching the background. Skrillex came to Reno on May 27 and held a benefit
concert for the Space Whale project. You can read about it here
and see a 7½ minute video that does a
great job of summing up a lot of what’s going on. Now that’s remarkable enough,
but for me it turned out to be a wee homecoming of sorts. Huh? You might ask.
Or perhaps, who or what is Skrillex?
Back in 2012 when I started this freelancing odyssey, I
blogged about working
for a day in a Bangladeshi sweatshop. That turned out to be my introduction
to dubstep, and although Skrillex wasn’t cited in that post, that’s when I
remember first learning about him. How delightful to stumble across him, and
dubstep, once again in the context of the Space Whale! It all comes around…
Meanwhile, this is one
of the oddest alternate routes I’ve seen in Google maps. The blue line route
from Sparks to Burning Man is 114 miles (about 2 hrs). Or, you might prefer the
gray line route, out to the left, which loops through Northern California and
is 294 miles (5.5 hrs). Exactly why would I want to consider that western loop?
Addendum: Just found this preview of Burning Man 2016 - featured on Flipboard August 27 - that talks about the Space Whale. https://www.fest300.com/magazine/big-ass-burning-man-art
Addendum: Just found this preview of Burning Man 2016 - featured on Flipboard August 27 - that talks about the Space Whale. https://www.fest300.com/magazine/big-ass-burning-man-art
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