GRCVCYROMar 29

Engineering Mythology: A Digital-Physical Framework for Culturally-Inspired Public Art

arXiv:2603.2780114.91 citationsh-index: 7
AI Analysis

It offers a framework for interdisciplinary projects combining cultural heritage, STEAM education, and public art, but is primarily a case study with incremental methodological insights.

The paper presents a digital-physical workflow for creating a culturally-inspired public art sculpture, integrating digital sculpting, distributed fabrication, and modular assembly, successfully deployed at Burning Man 2025.

Navagunjara Reborn: The Phoenix of Odisha was built for Burning Man 2025 as both a sculpture and an experiment-a fusion of myth, craft, and computation. This paper describes the digital-physical workflow developed for the project: a pipeline that linked digital sculpting, distributed fabrication by artisans in Odisha (India), modular structural optimization in the U.S., iterative feedback through photogrammetry and digital twins, and finally, one-shot full assembly at the art site in Black Rock Desert, Nevada. The desert installation tested not just materials, but also systems of collaboration: between artisans and engineers, between myth and technology, between cultural specificity and global experimentation. We share the lessons learned in design, fabrication, and deployment and offer a framework for future interdisciplinary projects at the intersection of cultural heritage, STEAM education, and public art. In retrospect, this workflow can be read as a convergence of many knowledge systems-artisan practice, structural engineering, mythic narrative, and environmental constraint-rather than as execution of a single fixed blueprint.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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