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The art installation titled “Awakening" when it was on display at the Burning Man festival in 2016. Photo by Valerie Santerli, provided by the artists
The art installation titled “Awakening” when it was on display at the Burning Man festival in 2016. Photo by Valerie Santerli, provided by the artists
Ray Rinaldi of The Denver Post.

Artists Ryan Elmendorf and Nick Geurts will bring a bit of Burning Man to Denver this weekend, installing their large-scale, interactive sculpture “Awakening” in the RiNo neighborhood for a one-night-only event on Saturday.

Viewers can enter the sculpture “Awakening” through a door in the ear of its head. Photo by Valerie Santerli, provided by the artists

The evening offers a chance to see a landmark artwork making its local debut, but it is also a party with some of the special attractions that make the Burning Man festival, staged annually in the Nevada desert, such a wild affair: DJs, performance artists, fire spinners, aerialists, adult beverages and more than 20 vendors selling various wares.

It will also serve an artful cause. The $20 admission raises funds that the artists will use later this month to take the piece back to the festival, where they are the de facto ambassadors for Colorado among an international group of over-the-top makers.

“I think that what a lot of people overlook about Burning Man — it’s talked about as this huge party — is that it is actually a great opportunity for artists,” said Valerie Santerli, who is part of a crew of Denverites who have been supporting Elmendorf and Geurts over the years.

The fest is also a showplace where artists who work “big” get to show off their skills to potential customers. “A lot of different cities across the country end up buying projects like this for their towns,” said Santerli, who is also the owner of Rule Gallery in Denver’s Santa Fe arts district.

That aspect of Burning Man has actually led to professional careers for these artists and helped build a national client base for their business, called Elmendorf Geurts, one of the largest fabricators of public art pieces in the state.

The company has produced some of the most recognizable works in the region, collaborating with artists such as Mike Lustig on the giant mirror ball that hangs over the crowd at Mission Ballroom; with David Zimmer on the LED panels on the downtown piece titled “Echo;” and with the late Colorado contemporary art legend Clark Richert on the light-up sphere called “Quadrivium” installed in the Uptown neighborhood.

A photo from this week’s installation of “Awakening” at the ReelWorks event center in Denver. Photo by Daniel Tseng, special to The Denver Post.

They are also the creative team behind the popular “Skysong,” the large musical instrument at the Levitt Pavilion that users activate by pressing on a panel of stainless steel buttons.

“Awakening,” which premiered in 2016, is one of Elmendorf and Geurts’ more complicated creations. It consists of three related, steel-frame pieces, resembling two hands and a human head that stand about 16 feet tall.

The hands rise out of the ground and have flexible fingers with highly-polished stainless steel balls representing the finger joints.

The head is the interactive part. Viewers can enter it using one of the ears as a door. Inside, they encounter a camera obscura, a piece of optical equipment going back to the days of Leonardo da Vinci.

The camera captures the image in front of it and projects it on the rear wall of the structure. In essence, the sculpture’s eyes work in a similar way to actual human eyes, displaying “an expansive, 180-degree field of inverted vision,” as Elmendorf puts it.

The artist explained that “Awakenings” is meant as a tribute to the human body and how it makes us different than other living creatures.

“The most advanced pieces of equipment humans have are our hands and our eyes, our ability to manipulate things and our ability to perceive,” he said. “So this is kind of an homage to that, to those mechanisms.”

Elmendorf and Geurts have been Burning Man regulars for more than 20 years and are among a small group of artists who receive grants from the festival. The multiday fest can draw as many as 80,000 people, many of whom camp out on the arid land. It is famous for outrageous costumes, cutting-edge music and free-spirited frolicking.

Saturday’s event will not be so extreme. But it will be its own sort of variety show, with artists set up among the crowd showing their skills, and an art car that doubles as a stage. The action starts outdoors at 6 p.m. and is open to all. Then, at 10 p.m., it moves to an inside space for late-night dancing for the 21-plus crowd.

IF YOU GO

ReelWorks is located at 1399 35th St. Tickets and info are available at the door or online at reelworks.ticketsauce.com.

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