The natural and simple thing to do when commissioned to revise the boardwalk for the Jazz Festival was to “go with the flow” of Montreux, to work with this ambience of shiny lights and glamour. The Bada Bing sign came to mind as a logotype for 1980’s aesthetic. Working with neon lights seemed quite straightforward. Neon signs represented not only the aesthetic of the Las Vegas strip and of the nightlife of Chicago’s jazz clubs but also the work of a number of important conceptual artists working from the 1960’s onwards. Artists like Dan Flavin, Lucio Fontana, Bruce Nauman, Joeph Kosuth or Mario Merz took the light tubes out of the jazz clubs and hang them on the walls of art galleries and museums. Neon writings have this magical power to turn words into signs, opening thus possibilities of interpretation. The impossible ambition was probably to bridge these two cultures: the sharpness and diagrammatic design of conceptual art neon signs with the culture of the strip.
The boardwalk has been reorganised entirely for the festival with a series of new decks, temporarily installed over the water, taking advantage of the great scenery. Neon signs have been placed at the entrance of every deck. They have obsessively occupied the boardwalk through two series of generic words: one designating generic food (pizza, paella, kebab) for the catering area and another series of jazz-history based styles (be-bob, latin-jazz, jazz-rock, boogie-woogie, etc) for the lake decks. The neon writing was supported by a freestanding structure, using the classical figure of the arch as a framing device capable of capturing romantic scenery of the lake and the Alps. The main deck, 40 meters long by 10 meters wide “dives” into the lake providing a large public and romantic space. 12 arches and neon signs, placed randomly, illuminate the platform filled with deckchairs.