Chairs Remix

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It is snowing. On the ground it turns out to be more ice and water than snowflakes. This seems early for Indianapolis. Halloween is a week away and only the maple leaves are earnestly turning yellow. Autumn still has a lot to do before winter takes over.

It’s impossible not to conjure up little weather reports like this one because Rebecca and I will be installing and remixing the Chairs on Monument Circle next Monday. We’ve been discussing a Chair Redux since the first chairs appeared a month ago today. The 24th of September was gorgeous downtown – no clouds, all sun, warm, relaxed, different from today.

This is something that all artists, all people, have to deal with – changing variables. It is always tempting to get your mitts all over the possible alterations that a work of art might endure. But when working in public restraint becomes a powerful core value of design. It doesn’t take much to turn sincere intent into yuck. So we are not changing the chairs. We’re not changing color, size, shape, dimensions, number, or location. The only change will be the date.

This, by itself, is enough to alter how the chairs work, or don’t work. On 9/24/2013 it was 70 degrees downtown. Will a 58 degree day (the projected high for Monday) intrinsically change the role the chairs play on the Circle? I know that chance operations are at work here but I’m not sure it really matters. I mean we could go on about designing for the unexpected but it would be beside the point. The Chairs, as part of TOI’s project INDY LOVES YOU, are focused on hospitality – Hoosier-, or as I said before, IndyStyle-Hospitality. Why wouldn’t Indy want to be known around the world for what it’s already doing – being gracious and welcoming. This is the meaning behind the chairs.

When I was taking the chairs down at the end of the event on the 24th I was reminded of the Stage Manager character in Thornton Wilder’s Our Town. Well, I was reminded of something the Stage Manager says in the play. I had to spend a little time looking it up so I’d be able to quote it to you now.

He says, “We all know that something is eternal. And it ain’t houses and it ain’t names, and it ain’t earth, and it ain’t even the stars… everybody knows in their bones that something is eternal, and that something has to do with human beings. All the greatest people ever lived have been telling us that for five thousand years and yet you’d be surprised how people are always losing hold of it. There’s something way down deep that’s eternal about every human being.”

I thought of this passage on the 24th because I had just spent a remarkable afternoon watching people be themselves out in public. The chairs set that stage. The people did all the beautiful stuff.

-Oh, I just figured out that there are two things we are changing about the chairs. Besides the date being altered we’re letting you know before we put them up. We’ll find out together if this makes a difference?