{"id":1092,"date":"2024-04-23T21:04:52","date_gmt":"2024-04-23T21:04:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thichhat.com\/?p=1092"},"modified":"2025-04-25T04:27:35","modified_gmt":"2025-04-25T04:27:35","slug":"stardust-and-sweat-inside-the-knife-edge-development-of-coachellas-quasar-stage-with-its-designer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thichhat.com\/index.php\/2024\/04\/23\/stardust-and-sweat-inside-the-knife-edge-development-of-coachellas-quasar-stage-with-its-designer\/","title":{"rendered":"Stardust and Sweat: Inside the Knife-Edge Development of Coachella's Quasar Stage With Its Designer"},"content":{"rendered":"
For the idealistic minds behind the producers of music festivals, one question often gnaws like a spider in the brain: can a stage be more than just a platform?<\/p>\n
For Heather Shaw, it’s a resounding “yes.” Shaw is the designer of Coachella’s brand-new Quasar stage, which propelled electronic dance music as one of the iconic festival’s biggest draws in a year teeming with unforgettable rave moments<\/a>.<\/p>\n As the founder and CEO of Vita Motus Design Studio, Shaw has executed phantasmagoric stages for EDC, Electric Forest and Lightning in a Bottle, among other major festivals. She also made history in 2022 as the first female lead production designer for the MTV Video Music Awards.<\/p>\n Vita Motus Design Studio<\/p>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n But she found herself in a pressure cooker ahead of Coachella, the nation’s quintessential music festival. In a whirlwind three-month design sprint, Shaw manifested a universe in the festival’s hallowed desert metropolis, where Quasar dissolved the boundaries between conceptual art and performative spectacle.<\/p>\n Reimagining the concert stage as a living, breathing organism, Quasar, Shaw tells us, was designed “to push the boundaries of what’s possible at music festivals.” She paints a picture of a bastion of iconoclastic design that transcends the typical festival stage’s proscribed role as inert backdrop.<\/p>\n Fans at Quasar willingly plunged into the rapturous rabbit holes of three-hour DJ sets by R\u00dcF\u00dcS DU SOL and a cancer-free Michael Bibi<\/a>, among other influential dance music artists. An undeniable highlight came on Saturday of the festival’s second weekend, when Eric Prydz and Anyma\u2014two of the industry’s most subversive purveyors of visual displays\u2014performed together for the first time as the sun set.<\/p>\n We caught up with Shaw to discuss how her team conjured the Quasar stage, a technological marvel that pushed the Coachella experience into the future.<\/p>\n The way Anyma and Eric Prydz combined their visuals at @coachella<\/a>'s Quasar stage \ud83e\udd2f\ud83d\udd25<\/p>\n via: @anyma_eva<\/a> @ericprydz<\/a> pic.twitter.com\/XSiC4nmn50<\/a><\/p>\n\n