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Main Authors: Das, Jnaneshwar, Filkins, Christopher, Moharana, Rajesh, Barik, Ekadashi, Das, Bishweshwar, Ayers, David, Skiba, Christopher, Staggers Jr, Rodney, Dill, Mark, Miller, Swig, Tulberg, Daniel, Smith, Patrick, Brink, Seth, Breen, Kyle, Anand, Harish, Arrowsmith, Ramon
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.27801
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author Das, Jnaneshwar
Filkins, Christopher
Moharana, Rajesh
Barik, Ekadashi
Das, Bishweshwar
Ayers, David
Skiba, Christopher
Staggers Jr, Rodney
Dill, Mark
Miller, Swig
Tulberg, Daniel
Smith, Patrick
Brink, Seth
Breen, Kyle
Anand, Harish
Arrowsmith, Ramon
author_facet Das, Jnaneshwar
Filkins, Christopher
Moharana, Rajesh
Barik, Ekadashi
Das, Bishweshwar
Ayers, David
Skiba, Christopher
Staggers Jr, Rodney
Dill, Mark
Miller, Swig
Tulberg, Daniel
Smith, Patrick
Brink, Seth
Breen, Kyle
Anand, Harish
Arrowsmith, Ramon
contents 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.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_27801
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Engineering Mythology: A Digital-Physical Framework for Culturally-Inspired Public Art
Das, Jnaneshwar
Filkins, Christopher
Moharana, Rajesh
Barik, Ekadashi
Das, Bishweshwar
Ayers, David
Skiba, Christopher
Staggers Jr, Rodney
Dill, Mark
Miller, Swig
Tulberg, Daniel
Smith, Patrick
Brink, Seth
Breen, Kyle
Anand, Harish
Arrowsmith, Ramon
Graphics
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Computers and Society
Robotics
I.3.5; I.3.8; I.4.1; J.5; J.2
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.
title Engineering Mythology: A Digital-Physical Framework for Culturally-Inspired Public Art
topic Graphics
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Computers and Society
Robotics
I.3.5; I.3.8; I.4.1; J.5; J.2
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.27801