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Public art gets temporary display during Prototype Festival on Denver’s 16th Street Mall

Interactive sculptures could become part of downtown mall, but you need to vote

Tamara Chuang of The Denver Post.
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Colton Kostalnick, 6, from Golden grabs hold of the Peak1Six prototype by Shears Adkins Rockmore Architects. The Prototyping Festival takes place in downtown Denver along the 16th Street Mall on Saturday, July 23, 2016.
Cyrus McCrimmon, The Denver Post
Colton Kostalnick, 6, from Golden grabs hold of the Peak1Six prototype by Shears Adkins Rockmore Architects. The Prototyping Festival takes place in downtown Denver along the 16th Street Mall on Saturday, July 23, 2016.

Nine outdoor art projects made their way to 16th Street Mall on Saturday as part of an experiment to see what the public will do.

Sean Cason, 7, right, and brother Jacob, 4, visiting from Dawsonville , GA, perch themselves atop the Rainbow Street Seating prototype by Nick Fish, Yong Huang, and Tony Yue, the AtelierHay and WorthGroup. The Prototyping Festival takes place in downtown Denver along the 16th Street Mall on Saturday, July 23, 2016.
Cyrus McCrimmon, The Denver Post
Sean Cason, 7, right, and brother Jacob, 4, visiting from Dawsonville , Ga., perch themselves atop the Rainbow Street Seating prototype by Nick Fish, Yong Huang, and Tony Yue, the AtelierHay and WorthGroup. The Prototyping Festival takes place in downtown Denver along the 16th Street Mall on Saturday.

Pedestrians couldn’t help but interact with the city’s inaugural Prototyping Festival and spin bicycle tires on the Wheels Go Round by Kate Davis Studio. Children ran through the “Summer Snowfall” diorama with its thin strips of fabric hanging from a white wooden ceiling.

The experiment, located on the mall between Champa and Curtis streets, is sponsored by the Downtown Denver Partnership and Denver Business Improvement District, which put the call out in April for art. Thirty four projects were submitted but there was only enough funding for nine. Each received up to $2,500 for materials.

“We brought to life as many as we could and would fit into the budget,” said Brea Olson, a spokesperson for Downtown Denver. “We are studying how people are interacting with the prototypes and how they stood up to the wear and tear of people interacting with them, as well as the weather.”

Visitors can provide feedback through the downtown passport program. Passports are available at Em’s Ice Cream cart. Turn in feedback and Em’s will toss in a free scoop of ice cream.

“The ultimate goal is to implement one as a permanent structure on 16th Street Mall,” Olson added.

The Prototype project disappears from the mall July 31.

DENVER, CO. - JULY 23: Monika Wittig, left, Stephen Garran, right, and Sophie Fearon sit inside the Aperture prototype by Sort Studio, Meredith Dale and Brian Dale. The Prototyping Festival takes place in downtown Denver along the 16th Street Mall on Saturday, July 23, 2016. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
Kathryn Scott, Special to The Denver Post
Monika Wittig, left, Stephen Garran, right, and Sophie Fearon sit inside the Aperture prototype by Sort Studio, Meredith Dale and Brian Dale.