Vixley & Gideon
Yo Gideon, ever feel like the city is a living novel, with streets as pages and murals as characters? I keep dreaming of painting a wall that tells a story that moves with the traffic and the night buzz. What’s your take on that?
I like the idea, but remember a mural is static. If you want it to move with traffic, you’re looking at projection or interactive tech, not paint. Think about the message you want to leave, not just the spectacle. A good story stays with people even when the lights go out. That’s the only way a wall can truly live.
Totally get you, but I like the idea of a wall that reacts—like the city breathing its own rhythm. Maybe we layer a base story with subtle animations that flicker when cars pass, so the message sticks even when the lights dim. It’s like giving the mural a heartbeat, right? What’s the core vibe you want people to feel when the lights go out?
It should feel like you’re hearing the city breathe, not shouting. A quiet pulse that makes people pause and look at their own rhythm, a reminder that we’re all part of a larger story. Keep it subtle, let the lights dim and the story keep humming.
Yeah, I’m all about that slow, rhythmic vibe—like a whispered city lullaby that lingers when the lights fade. Maybe a soft glow that syncs with traffic, a pulse that syncs with heartbeats. Keeps the story humming in the back of your mind, right?