Monday, 15 April 2019

Why Art Thrives at Burning Man


One can always be a Unicorn.
In her TED talk, Nora Atkinson explains Why art thrives at Burning Man.

There has been 30 years of Burning Man, with it's  origins in early anarchist years. Atkinson describes it today as an experiment in collective dreaming.  Every year around August thousands of people for a single week power down their tech and pilgrimage out into the Black Rock, Nevada Desert.


Participants at Burning Man, i guess the theme is simply, expression.



Their purpose?

To build and anti-consumerist society outside the bounds of their everyday lives.
The entire encampment of Burning Man can be thought of as one giant interactive art installation driven by the participation of everyone in it.

What set it aside from commercial art work is that anyone who makes work can show it.

None are sold there. At the end of the week if the works aren't burned, artists have to cart them back out and store them. It's a labour of love.

Created by Alexander Milov 2015, signifying external conflict and internal need

Burning Man 2018



It's about redefining arts value by the emotional connection it creates between the artist and the audience, or the benefits it gives our society, or the fulfillment it gives the artist themselves.

These are also the questions that contemporary jewellery asks, The VGCJ explains contemporary jewellery as that," which can be described as contemporary not merely because of its recent date, but because of its engagement with a diverse range of contemporary social, environmental, technical or artistic trends."

Any piece of jewellery we create is contemporary because it is made today and it can fall within one or more of these terms, it's not something that is exact, like everything in the universe it can flow together.
Nothing is true, everything is permitted.

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