Victoria Broakes: The audience in Bowie's life have been so important to the Bowie story and doing something like this weekender allows people to participate far more.
Sophie Reynolds: Bowie is incredibly interested in every aspect of his work. So this weekend was never going to be just about music, it was going to be about all of those artforms.
Geoffrey Marsh: The idea was to look at some of the people who influenced him in the 1960s and 70s and also look at his ongoing influence today.
Amber Butchart: In the context of today, David Bowie is for me, a gateway to talk about a lot of areas that I am really interested.
Charles Shaar Murray: Miles knew him when he was still in the process of figuring out how to become David Bowie and we have been having a great time comparing notes.
Kathryn Johnson: We want the events this weekend to really reflect the huge range of things Bowie has been inspired by.
Victoria Broakes: Paul Morley is writing a book in the main entrance and he's writing it as a spectator sport.
Paul Morley: I'm writing about David Bowie but I'm also writing about the idea of writing about David Bowie. I kind of liked it as a technical task, to see if it was possible to write anything coherant at all.
Participant: Everybody has been writing on colour-coded Post-It notes. They can just write down a little message and they are making the face of the Aladdin Sane album cover.
Sophie Reynolds: The aim was to create a Bowie World. One critic said that the exhibition was like being inside Bowie's head. Hopefully this weekend has brought that spirit out into the whole museum.
Claire Sturgess: I've brought my Bowie magazine that has been out this past month so people can stop and have a read through, have a chat. I have got my pen and paper so I will be taking requests - if people want requests.
Geoffrey Marsh: We ought to try and provide for everybody an inspiration for the area of art and design that interests them and i think that is what Bowie tries to do as well.
Barry Miles: He's the only one working with in pop music tradition - the rock and roll tradition - who has so many sides to him.
Helen Tian JD MA: Staging. Stage designs. Lighting - I mean it just goes on and on and on...
Sophie Reynolds: Its all about celebrating David Bowie in all of his guises, all of his influences and all of his inspirations and all of the people he inspired and influenced.
Victoria Broakes: It's the responses that he gets from people that akes his such an invigorating and special kind of performer.
Paul Morley: The book in the end is a kind of mystery about someone sat in the grand entrance of the Victoria and Albert Museum writing a book about David Bowie... and stuff happens.
Charles Shaar Murray: Bowie is the champion and the exemplar of the transformative power of the imagination.
Helen Tian JD MA: The scope of it is overwhelming, to the point where one really thinks - 'did one person do all of that?'
Paul Morley: Those of us who loved him at the time were right. You know forty years later he is still around; it's not ultimately about just the pop song or about pop music. It's about ideas, power, the imagination. It's about a grand astonishment of being alive.