Las Vegas Review-Journal

The art is not burning anymore

- By Brian Schaefer New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — At the end of the summer, for one week only, hundreds of giant fantastica­l sculptures and whimsical roving vehicles appear, then disappear like a shimmering mirage in the Nevada desert. We’re talking about Burning Man, the notoriousl­y free-spirited annual spectacle that has occupied a dry lake bed outside Reno for nearly 30 years.

Depictions of Burning Man tend to focus on the hedonistic antics of attendees, but from the beginning, when its co-founder, Larry Harvey, burned a wooden effigy as a summer solstice ritual on a San Francisco beach in 1986, art has been part of its DNA, and increasing­ly the museum world is taking notice. When Burning Man started selling tickets in the mid-1990s, it began giving away artist grants. That support, now totaling around $1.3 million annually, plus quiet funding from Silicon Valley, has allowed Burning Man’s art projects to grow in ambition and quality.

A generation of volunteers spawned more artists, turning Burning Man into “an informal but very effective art school,” as Harvey put it. Pointing to these apprentice­s and what he called “enlightene­d patronage,” he sees parallels in the blossoming of art at Burning Man and the Italian Renaissanc­e, its art theme in 2016.

It’s a leap — but the Hermitage Museum & Gardens in Norfolk, Virginia, hosted an exhibition of Burning Man art last summer, and on March 30, “No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man” will invite the radical art of the desert into the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum in Washington, steps from the White House, for its first major national showcase. Both are making a case that this large scale, largely crowd-funded, collaborat­ive and ideologica­lly driven work deserves considerat­ion as an important modern art movement.

“This is an area of contempora­ry art that has been completely overlooked by the commercial world because it’s been so non-commodifie­d,” said Nora Atkinson, the Renwick’s curator.

Of course, some compromise­s to the art were inevitable. “This is all painted with Nochar, ironically enough,” said artist Michael Garlington, referring to a brand of fire retardant he was using for his towering installati­on, “The Paper Arch,” created with Natalia Bertotti. “Whereas we’d usually build things as flammable as possible, here we’re making it safe and sound.”

There were other challenges. How does Burning Man’s principle of radical participat­ion translate to the “look, don’t touch” propriety of museums? And will the festival learn to speak the institutio­nal language of “outreach and education”?

Those challenges were part of the show’s appeal for both parties. Touching will be encouraged for most works, and outreach is precisely what Burning Man is after. In the process, both cultural institutio­n and countercul­tural event may re-evaluate their relationsh­ips to the mainstream. “That’s going to be a really cool outcome if the lines get blurred,” said Kim Cook, Burning Man’s director of art and civic engagement. “If we’re not so far out and the museum isn’t so far in.”

Atkinson, who recently attended her first Burning Man, contrasted that experience with the frenzied marketplac­e of Art Basel Miami, another annual fair of similar size and duration. In Miami, art is a product; an investment. At Burning Man, art is a manifestat­ion of communal values, like inclusion and participat­ion, that generate playful work emphasizin­g interactio­n and feeling over economics.

Those qualities make Burning Man art “less attractive in the convention­al world of galleries,” Harvey said. “But at the same time the great potency of this is that it’s a social movement.” That said, some of the works are acquired after the event by cities or businesses. And Burning Man is eager to help its artists make a living beyond the desert.

The Renwick exhibition includes sculptures, art cars, light installati­ons (including one by Leo Villareal that is part of the Renwick’s permanent collection), virtual reality experience­s, jewelry and costume displays, an immersive temple (one of the show’s three commission­ed works), and a documented history of the event organized by the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno. The Renwick also teamed up with the Golden Triangle Business Improvemen­t District to extend the exhibition into the neighborho­od, where six installati­ons — among them, a giant bear made of pennies and a bronze head of Maya Angelou — will inhabit parks and sidewalks.

Burning Man has bohemian roots and can be seen as a descendant of dada, Allan Kaprow’s Happenings and the psychedeli­c Merry Pranksters. Yet the Renwick is the arm of the Smithsonia­n dedicated to American craft, and “No Spectators” celebrates Burning Man as a hub of modern maker culture. The arts and crafts movement was born in response to the Industrial Revolution, and Atkinson suggests that Burning Man art responds to the digital and informatio­n revolution­s.

“Each time we take another one of these technologi­cal leaps, there needs to be a balancing humanist force that keeps us connected,” she said. The link between Silicon Valley and Burning Man in both proximity and attendance is no accident, she said. But what happens when art shaped by utopian principles and intended as a civic gift to a temporary city is uprooted from its native white sands and replanted within white walls across the street from the White House, suddenly subject to the scrutiny of critics, curators and busy tourists?

“This is the heart of the experiment now,” Cook said. “When you move into another context, how much cultural integrity can you maintain and insist upon?” The experiment she refers to is the expansion of Burning Man. In recent years, the organizati­on — which has dozens of fulltime, year-round employees — has been planning its long-term legacy. In 2011, it shifted from a limited liability company to a nonprofit, consolidat­ing previously independen­t entities, like the Black Rock Arts Foundation, under one roof.

Since the Bureau of Land Management has capped attendance at Burning Man at about 70,000 people, the organizati­on is exploring new ways to spread the gospel. Museums and municipali­ties are potential apostles. The goal is “a global movement which is not purely event-based anymore,” Cook said. “It’s as much about engaged citizenshi­p and quality of interactio­n as it is about having a function.”

Burning Man and the Smithsonia­n have worked together to ensure that values are upheld while institutio­nal needs are met. Admission to the Smithsonia­n, as always, is free. A licensing agreement lets Burning Man review signage and press materials and set guidelines for merchandis­ing and sponsorshi­p. Nothing with the Burning Man name or logo will be sold in the gift shop; no corporate sponsors are acknowledg­ed near the artwork, although the Renwick’s exhibition is supported by Intel and the Golden Triangle’s by Lyft.

The Smithsonia­n is also enlisting local Burners, as the festivalgo­ers are known, as gallery volunteers to help interpret and enhance the experience. And a docent manual that Burning Man helped develop offers suggestion­s for promoting deeper encounters in the Burning Man spirit: “Think about facilitati­ng interactio­ns rather than simply sharing informatio­n.”

Here’s a look at several featured artists and collective­s adapting their Burning Man art to the white-walled museum world. Bertotti noted that the work “takes on a different preciousne­ss here.” But then, adaptabili­ty is a Burning Man virtue.

David Best

The first temple that sculptor David Best contribute­d to Burning Man, in 2000, was not meant to be a memorial but turned into one when a young artist he worked with was killed in a motorcycle accident weeks before the event. The following year, he was asked to build a temple for Burning Man, which became a place to mourn losses and mark transition­s. Burning Man has built a temple every year since, one of its annual traditions. It is ceremoniou­sly burned to conclude the event. “The fire can heal and seal and protect something,” Best said.

His temples were an impetus for the Renwick’s exhibition. “I don’t know if I would have done this show if I couldn’t have David in it,” Atkinson said. For “No Spectators,” Best and his crew are transformi­ng the second-floor Grand Salon into a sanctuary encased in ornately carved raw wood panels with a central chandelier that descends to meet an altar. “I use beauty as a trap to catch the most pained person,” he said. “It has to be delicate and strong at the same time.”

Best, 72, has made eight temples for Burning Man and several more beyond the desert, notably in 2015 in Londonderr­y, Northern Ireland. “When I turned 60, I said I’m only going to work with people. I stopped showing in galleries,” he said. “When I stopped that game, that system of objects for sale, it freed me. I promised myself when I turned 70 I was only going to do priceless work.”

Michael Garlington and Natalia Bertotti

Garlington, 41, and Bertotti, 33, met at Burning Man in 2012. He was an establishe­d photograph­er and a Burning Man veteran, having been a member of Best’s temple crew and the Department of Public Works, the group that builds the infrastruc­ture for their temporary Black Rock City. She was a newbie, not then an artist.

Their first collaborat­ion was “The Photo Chapel” in 2013, a Gothic-style sanctuary clad in provocativ­e black-and-white photograph­y (some with Bertotti as subject), which establishe­d their signature style of spiritual tramp art. (At the Renwick recently, Garlington wore a Frida Kahlo pin and called her an inspiratio­n.) The more ambitious “Totem of Confession­s” followed in 2015. Both pieces were burned in the desert.

The 15-foot-tall “Paper Arch,” which the Renwick commission­ed, is made of wood, paper, fabric and found objects and conceals two peepholes in its base. It is covered in photos of people (including Susan Sarandon and Willem Dafoe), flora and fauna, and repeated prints of an eye — his mother’s — that Garlington has tattooed on his forearm. “Our tag line is ‘the horror and the wonder,’” he said. But for the arch, they decided, “let’s just put the wonder in.”

Five ton crane

In 2007, the 40-foot-tall rusted metal Steampunk Tree House sprouted from the desert during Burning Man, made by a group of Oakland-based friends. From that project came Five Ton Crane, a collective that now boasts more than 170 artists, among them painters, welders, graphic designers, programmer­s, light and sound artists and woodworker­s. “It becomes less about the individual ego and more about the process and collaborat­ive nature of building these things,” Sean Orlando, a co-founder, said of their ethos.

Over the past decade Five Ton Crane has brought charming art cars and fanciful installati­ons to Burning Man. For the Renwick, the collective contribute­d “Capitol Theater,” a 12-seat art deco movie theater on the back of a big red bus — an example of what is known at Burning Man as a mutant vehicle. Three films will be shown on a loop, including a six-minute German abstract impression­ist dance and a silent melodrama created by the collective. Small moments of discovery are buried throughout: colorful dioramas hidden in vintage film reels, a discarded fictional newspaper.

“We pride ourselves on our craftsmans­hip and the level of detail in all of our pieces,” Orlando said. “We want people to explore it.”

 ?? ELEANOR PREGER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Marco Cochrane’s monumental sculpture, “Truth is Beauty,” 55 feet tall, is shown during its 2013 debut at Burning Man. The Smithsonia­n American Art Museum is inviting the radical art of the desert into the Renwick Gallery for an exhibition, “No...
ELEANOR PREGER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Marco Cochrane’s monumental sculpture, “Truth is Beauty,” 55 feet tall, is shown during its 2013 debut at Burning Man. The Smithsonia­n American Art Museum is inviting the radical art of the desert into the Renwick Gallery for an exhibition, “No...
 ?? JUSTIN T. GELLERSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The virtual reality art of Android Jones being installed at the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum in Washington, March 9, 2018.
JUSTIN T. GELLERSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES The virtual reality art of Android Jones being installed at the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum in Washington, March 9, 2018.

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