Nashville’s Newest Live Event Experience
Emily Buckner Pierce is helping to bring a new socially distanced, drive-through experience to Nashville that's about to turn the world of live entertainment upside down. Meet the art director of Eamotion.
An established art director, prop stylist and production designer, Emily Buckner Pierce received a design degree from Belmont University and immediately put her talents to work on projects for such prestigious clients as Old Glory, Ruby Tuesday and Rachael Ray Magazine. Her most recent endeavor is as art director for Eamotion, a socially distanced, immersive experience that allows guests to drive through a high-tech course of light, sound, video and special effects. It debuts in September here in Nashville, and it might just be her most thrilling gig to date. Please welcome our newest FACE of Nashville, Emily Buckner Pierce.

How did you get into design?
I grew up in Tullahoma, about an hour outside of Nashville, and I come from a family of very creative people β like, Martha Stewart-level skills. I went to school to be a graphic designer, and I spent a long time behind the computer doing that and found it wasnβt enough for me creatively. I was always working with my hands, doing other projects, and taking on other freelance gigs that would enable me to become well-rounded, stay creative, and expose myself to all sorts of stuff. Over the years, it naturally guided me toward production design and art direction. It was so organic in how it happened, from working with photographers to doing commercial advertising.
Specifically, in the context of Eamotion and working with the guys over at Cour Design, I was at Nashville Design Week just going to see a panel, and both Erik (Anderson) and Gordon (Droitcour) were on it. I really loved what they were talking about, and I was familiar with their work and seeing it in the wild, and I introduced myself and said, βIβm an art director. I do production design here in Nashville. How do I get involved with you guys?β We hit it off and started working together on production design for some of their artists β for example, Lauvβs tour. We found that we worked well together, and it snowballed into them asking if I wanted to work on art direction for other artists or installation projects. My background is primarily with commercial advertising, with entertainment industry stuff peppered throughout, but my favorite stuff has been within the past year and a half, focusing specifically on entertainment and tour production.

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Can you tell us about the concept of Eamotion and what inspired it?
On a core level, the thing that inspired it was that everyoneβs work got frozen because of the pandemic. All of these projects stopped in their tracks, and genuinely, no one was offering up a good solution. There are so many unknowns. We love what we do and miss it, and thereβs the practical matter of so many people being unemployed β all of our friends, our whole industry. Thereβs also so much gear thatβs sitting around, collecting dust and not doing anything. There are crowds of people who have plans and were looking forward to stuff, and theyβre stuck in the mud just as much as we are. Thatβs what brought it about, but it aligned with the creative challenge. That was sort of the impetus for us chasing after this.
What can people expect when they attend Eamotion?
Our first experience is called βTempo,β and itβs a driving experience. When people roll up in their cars, weβll scan their tickets through the window β thereβs no contact with anyone directly β and they will be guided along a course. Itβs like a festival and a concert and a light show on steroids. The pure scale of animation and lighting and special effects, all of those things that youβre familiar with when you go to a festival or concert, all of those familiar elements are combined on a huge scale.
Itβs something that can tour across America. The same model can be deployed in multiple locations at the same time across the country because weβre following a similar infrastructure that touring and production companies already use and do. Weβre just re-doing it to match pandemic guidelines, and weβre also taking it on a scale thatβs otherworldly. For example, in this first show, we have an over-50-foot-tall video pyramid. You can drive through this thing; itβs massive.

Have you been able to experience the completed course yet?
Digitally, yes. We have tools so we can preview our content and course maps, and there are architectural drawings for everything so we know everything thatβs going to happen. Itβs no different for us than a tour that we would put on for an artist. Itβs a mash-up of different technical tools for us to visualize it, and weβve taken a lot of traditional, familiar elements that we already operate as touring crews who go all over the globe. Itβs the same model where itβs designed, programmed and done in advance, but people show up on-site and they build it in two days.
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Whatβs the best advice youβve ever been given?
Itβs actually pretty practical: βjust show up.β So much of the work is just showing up and doing it. I found that to be incredibly valuable in my own career. You donβt need to know the answers; you just need to show up and be prepared to learn and follow through.

Outside of faith, family and friends, what are three things you canβt live without?
I definitely canβt live without my computer. I donβt know what Iβd do without it. On the flip side, I also donβt know what I would do without vacations. When youβre tied to technology as much as I am, getting away from it, not answering the phone, and taking a timeout gives me the most creative power β even if itβs just two hours of sitting on my porch staring at the abyss, going on a hike, or going overseas. Checking out is essential. And then, I canβt live without my critters: my dogs.
Thank you, Emily! Learn more about her work HERE. Eamotion takes place at the Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway on September 18-22, 2020. Learn more about this experience and purchase ticket at eamotion.com.
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Jenna von Oy Bratcher
Jenna von Oy Bratcher is StyleBlueprint's Editorial Operations Manager and Lead Content Editor. The East Coast native moved to Nashville almost two decades ago, by way of Los Angeles. She is a lover of dogs, strong coffee, traveling, and exploring the local restaurant scene bite by bite.