Asher Young, Experiential Artist
Your World of Creativity
Mark Stinson
5.0 • 45 Ratings
🗓️ 21 October 2022
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
We’re back for another very fun interview on our podcast of Unlocking YOUR World of Creativity. We go around the world to talk to creative practitioners and leaders about how they get inspired, how they organize their ideas, and how they gain the confidence and connections to launch their work out into the world.
Today, we explore the world of NYC-based artist and creative director Asher Young. Asher He is the founder of Challenge Your Imagination, a creative direction, design, and producing studio developing projects internally and for others.
Our main conversation will be around Asher’s most recent piece Pathways at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, going on Tour with DPR, and what the collaboration and logistical side of creating these immersive audience experiences are like.
Pathways at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden use lasers to draw lines of light between a series of trees, creating a visible network and illuminating a new path for Lightscape visitors to explore.
Asher describes it as “a high-powered laser that bounces off trees through the botanic gardens that you can see at night. It’s a beam of life that sort of ricochets between the trees”
- The focus of the piece is on Mycorrhizal networks. Inspired through the works and science of Suzanne Simard, an ecologist discovered that trees communicate their needs and send each other nutrients via a network of latticed fungi buried in the soil — in other words, she found, they “talk” to each other
Asher explains, “that her work discovered that it's not competition. Plants actually share resources”
Pathways utilize light, which is the source of nutrients for the plants at night, to show those connections when a lot of that work is being done.
DPR: Regime Tour is a world tour that immerses fans in the world of music collective DPR. Asher talks about the part of the creative process with this world tour is about rethinking what the concert experience could be from the perspective of an audience.
- How do we merge theater, art, installation, and music?
- How do we think about collectives and how do we demonstrate that to the audience?
- How do we use the pre-show to warm people up to other things that are gonna happen later?
The show opens in September 2022
Mark asks: “What are the logistics of moving this experience from city to city?”
- when you're doing 55 cities worldwide and they're all different sizes
- it does have to fit in trailers
- It feels like five or six iterations of the concept and the physical elements of the show are incredibly modular
The running theme through the interview was collaboration and Asher explains how he and his team approach it “by establishing the framework of what matters and the idea that we're trying to articulate, the teams can come together and sort of ricochet and problem solve around it while maintaining that core principle.”
Toward the end of the interview, Asher gave us a few sneak peeks into future projects in the works. He said they are developing internally a lot of shows and experiences that are more hospitality-based or hotel-based, some that cross genres, i.e.; a dinner theater show, and projects that are more art-based. We look forward to seeing what’s next in the creative mind of Asher Young.
You can reach out to Asher Young, and see his creative works at cyi.studio
Also, check out his Instagram page @cy.studio
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Happy to your most original thinking, organize your ideas, and create the opportunities to launch your creative work. |
| 0:14.0 | Unlock in your world of creativity, with best-selling author and brand innovator, Mark Stinson. |
| 0:24.0 | Welcome back friends to our podcast Unlock in your world of creativity. |
| 0:28.0 | And today we're going to unlock some new worlds of creativity. |
| 0:32.0 | Worlds with stories and worlds with immersive experiences combining computer science and lights, art, music, theatre, |
| 0:40.0 | alter-creative-great-audience experience. |
| 0:43.0 | My guess is Asher Young. Asher, welcome to the program. |
| 0:46.0 | Oh, thanks so much for having me. I'm very excited to be here. |
| 0:49.0 | Yeah, well Asher is a creative director, but to say creative director is almost an understatement. |
| 0:55.0 | He really is creating these virtual worlds of experience, developing festival exhibits, living artwork, |
| 1:03.0 | and now he's going to be going on the road this fall with DPR, another kind of music experience. |
| 1:09.0 | Asher, tell us about this general creative process of years that you say, you know, when somebody says I want to create a experience. |
| 1:17.0 | Where does your mind go in terms of what ingredients could be a part of that experience? |
| 1:23.0 | It's a really great question because I think I come from the background that I was a magician for 10 years, I did haunted houses, |
| 1:29.0 | and I spent a long time in theatre. So I have sort of a world that comes from art and theatre. |
| 1:35.0 | And so I always try to approach things from a narrative perspective, as well as what is the audience's relationship to the work. |
| 1:43.0 | And so we have so many tools at our disposal to create a specific piece, whether it's art or theatre or even technology or scenic or all these things. |
| 1:53.0 | But the way we like to phrase it is the audience is the protagonist, right? |
| 1:57.0 | And so what do we want them to experience and feel in a given moment? |
| 2:01.0 | And the way that I sort of always approach things is try to get as specific as possible and say the audience walks into a room and it's raining. |
| 2:10.0 | And then you move through a show and brainstorm around the narrative concept in very specific like frames so that everyone can sort of rally around a specific image and then start to actually build that narrative together, whether it's a personal project or it's a project for, you know, a commissioned work for a client. |
| 2:30.0 | And I would say that it's a storyboarded or framed out, you know, you imagine this, I'm going to take you on a journey. |
... |
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