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UVLD (Unlimited Visibility Lighting Design)marked
its ninth collaboration with Curt Reed
Unlimited Visibility Lighting Design recently marked its ninth collaboration
with Curt Reed, Executiv Producer of St. Louis based See Our Solutions
on a major corporate event for John Deere. Curt Reed hired UVLD and
led the creative process on a twenty four day series of meetings at
Poland’s ' Warsaw Expo Center' for the Agricultural Division’s
European dealers. The conference, held every 5 years, coincided with
the John Deere’s 50th anniversary, presence on the European
continent.
5,000 dealers( approx.)attended the meetings, which unrolled in six
geographical waves and encompassed 15 languages. UVLD lit reveals
of new products for the opening night celebration, provided speaker
support for the sales meetings that followed, and was entrusted with
designing the reveal for a concept vehicle on the closing night. Working
closely with Curt Reed, John Ingram was UVLD’s lighting designer
for the project. David Rees served as associate lighting designer
and moving-light programmer.
Earlier in the year, UVLD lit John Deere’s US National Sales
Meeting, held in Omaha, Nebraska. The transition from a US city
to an Eastern European one required some attention. “We need
to be careful when a client’s expectations are based on a
previous production,” notes John Ingram. “Working at
home, it’s easy to fall in to a business as usual approach;
it’s critical to respect the inherent challenges international
work brings. However, working with Frankfurt based Statis&Fy,
we were able to create a show that was consistent with their expectations.”
“The size of the moving vehicles left no room on the floor
for any scenery — leaving it up to lighting to define mood
and texture,” David Rees explains. “Its unique lighting
farm equipment because their sheer size and shape present challenges
you don’t get with other types of vehicles. Also, the brand
colors allow us to use hues that other clients may find too bold.
It’s fun getting to use a palette of yellow and green.”
UVLD was faced with the limitations in the Expo Center’s
rigging capacity. “We weren’t able to hang truss in
the center 40 feet of performance space,” notes Rees. “John
overcame the challenges with a combination of creative lighting
positions and angles to minimize the compromises.”
UVLD deployed an array of Vari*Lite automated fixtures for aerial
effects with the atmospheric haze, to define texture and space,
and to light John Deere’s tractors. The moving lights consisted
of 30 VL3000 spots, 28 VL3000 washes, 36 VL2500 spots and 13 VL2500
washes.
24 Martin Atomic 3000 strobes furnished additional effects during
the reveal portions of the opening-night show; four DF50 haze machines
generated the atmospheric haze.
Sixty-six Source 4 ERS and 74 Source 4 PARs provided mostly white
light for speaker support; they were also tapped to front light
the tractors driving across the stage. Ten confetti cannons gave
a festive finish to the meetings’ finale.
UVLD controlled the lighting instruments with two active, and one
back up, Hog iPC consoles running Hog2PC software. A pair of Hog
iPC expansion wings were also utilized.
Source: infocomm.org
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