The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Beloved Burning Man festival co-founder dead at 70

- By John Rogers and Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO » Larry Harvey, whose whimsical decision to erect a giant wooden figure and then burn it to the ground led to the popular, long-running countercul­ture celebratio­n known as “Burning Man,” has died. He was 70.

Harvey died Saturday morning at a hospital in San Francisco, surrounded by family, Burning Man Project CEO Marian Goodell said. The cause was not immediatel­y known but he had suffered a stroke earlier this month.

Longtime friend Stuart Mangrum posted on the organizati­on’s website that Harvey did not believe in any sort of existence after death.

“Now that he’s gone, let’s take the liberty of contradict­ing him, and keep his memory alive in our hearts, our thoughts, and our actions,” Mangrum wrote. “As he would have wished it, let us always Burn the Man.”

The creator of the annual week-long summer festival in Northern Nevada’s Black Rock Desert was hospitaliz­ed April 4 after suffering a massive stroke. The Burning Man organizati­on did not disclose his prognosis, only saying that he was getting round-the-clock care.

Burning Man takes place annually the week before Labor Day, attracting some 70,000 people who pay anywhere from $425 to $1,200 a ticket to travel to a dry lake bed 100 miles (161 kilometers) east of Reno, where temperatur­es can routinely reach 100 degrees (37.8 degrees Celsius) during the summer. There they must carry in their own food, build their own makeshift community and engage in whatever interests them.

On the gathering’s penultimat­e day, the giant effigy — or Man as it is known — is set ablaze during a raucous, joyful celebratio­n.

“A city in the desert. A culture of possibilit­y. A network of dreamers and doers,” is how the gathering is described on Burning Man’s website.

An “esoteric mix of pagan fire ritual and sci-fi Dada circus where some paint their bodies, bang drums, dance naked and wear costumes that would draw stares in a Mardi Gras parade,” is how The Associated Press once described the gathering.

While tickets now sell out immediatel­y, Harvey described in a 2007 interview how he had much more modest intentions when he launched Burning Man on San Francisco’s Baker Beach one summer day in 1986.

“I called a friend and said, “Let’s go to the beach and burn a man,” he told the website Green Living. “And he said, ‘Can you say that again?’ And I did and we did it.”

It wasn’t until afterward, Harvey recalled, that he had the epiphany that led to Burning Man.

“What really changed my life and what in some sense gave birth to the rest of my life and career is the fact that suddenly all these people, on that beach, who we didn’t know, strangers, came running towards that figure,” he said.

 ?? ANDY BARRON — THE RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE ?? The “Man” burns on the Black Rock Desert at Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev. Larry Harvey, the co-founder of the “Burning Man” festival has died. He was 70.
ANDY BARRON — THE RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE The “Man” burns on the Black Rock Desert at Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev. Larry Harvey, the co-founder of the “Burning Man” festival has died. He was 70.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States