Photo by James Medcraft 
The 2nd annual Creators Project took over Brooklyn’s DUMBO neighborhood  this weekend, sending its usually family-filled cobblestone streets into  an artistic frenzy. While it was more serious than last year’s  open-bar event, the sober crowd consistently raved about one  installation in particular—Barney Clay’s reworked music video for David Bowie’s, Life on Mars.  Shot by the legendary photographer, Mick Rock in 1973, the video shows  Bowie in all his heyday glory—blue eyeshadow and matching wool crepe  suit included. Now reworked by Clay—a well-known filmmaker and the husband of Yeah Yeah  Yeah’s 
Karen O—the video has been turned into a digitized work of art. 
Bowie’s larger-than-life persona’s projected onto a two-story high cube,  circling around an audience that gapes in awe from its center. This  afternoon, we got a chance to chat with Clay about the piece… 
ELLE: How did this whole thing come about? 
BC: Mick and I were approached by The Creators Project to contribute  something. I was quite overwhelmed with the idea because Mick has such a  huge collection of work, so it was all about trying to restrain myself,  the more I could simplify the idea, the better. I decided to  concentrate on his work with Bowie, because he was Mick’s key  collaborator, it just made sense 
ELLE: So what drew you to the Life on Mars? video 
BC: It’s tremendously bold and iconic, simple yet so strong. 
ELLE: How have people reacted to the piece? 
BC: Interestingly enough wherever it’s being shown [the reaction] is  always pretty indicative of where the audience is from; in Paris people  were scratching their chins in a very intellectual, French kind of way,  in Brazil kids were hugging each other crying—it was very emotional, and  in China there was complete shock, actually a lot of people didn’t know  who David Bowie was—they loved it but were like, who is this crazy  looking, amazing person? 
ELLE: What does Bowie represent to you? 
BC: He’s a pioneer first and foremost—from the very beginning of his  career there was kind of an extreme plan of how he wanted to be and how  he wanted to present himself. He’s by far one of the most influential  musicians. That’s why we wanted to be sure we were pushing things  forward, not just taking a great piece of work from the past and  reworking it, but thinking into the future. Bowie was constantly  reworking his look, his sounds, and his vision to be something new and  different, so that was important to us.