Here is another concept for putting this thing together.
The assumption is that the picture will get full of dust no matter what we do so the attachment scheme should not take that into account. keeping it "clean" becomes a separate issue. So now the requirements are keeping it attached to the playa and keeping the pixels in the order that we want so that the picture emerges.
Try this on - people bring fabric cut in squares. no hems - no seams - no sewing. at the playa we have a device called a fabric drill. The core group takes the fabric and pile it up with the edges in rough alignment. all four corners are drilled so that we now have holes.
We bring enough ground staples such that we can staple the four corners of each pixel. each pixel is now overlaped with corners having one layer of fabric and inside corners having as many as 4. note that this means there are many duplicate corners which means fewer staples needed. I haven't worked the math but I think 2000 pixels is going to be something less than 3000 unique corners. I'll talk to the finite element guys tomorrow/today and find out what the equation is.
a ground staple is a piece of rebar that has been candy-caned. the staple is pounded down into the playa all the way so that the top of the "cane" is also in the ground. the people putting in the staples will need to push aside the fabric between the pixels so that the top of the cane doesn't have to pierce any fabric.
Cool aspects of this. no perimeter fence. no ropes needed to build structure - just something to lay out the grid. no sewing or glueing. volunteers only need scissors and they don't have to put any of the pixels together. we do all assembly on the playa - less coordination. it is a compartmentalized construction so if one pixel has a problem it is just that pixel. if one staple comes out of the ground it is only at most 4 pixels flapping around. people can walk on the picture if they are willing to walk around the staples and

carry a broom. everyone who gets near the thing should be handed a broom so they can help sweep it clean. instead of the spectators being a problem they become the solution.
The problems obvious to me are getting the fabric drill and access to electricity and a table to set the thing up on and keeping the drill clean so that it goes back to the
owner as good as we got it. making several thousand ground staples seems a little troublesome. pounding in several thousand ground staples sounds like work.
questions I have. how big is the drill bit? is rebar necessary or could we use a smaller metal diameter. The bit looks small in this picture. they use these things to mark fabic for subsequent assembly that does not involve the holes.
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My ex-wife used to have a fabric drill. I don't know if she still has it nor do I know if she would let us use it. In other words, I might be able to take care of getting that done if this is the plan we land on.