A dventures in P ap er - Black Rock City Heritage
Transcription
A dventures in P ap er - Black Rock City Heritage
Adventures in Paper Black Rock City Heritage Introduction Annually, on the dust flats of Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, emerges an ephemeral city of extraordinary wonder: the Burning Man arts and survival festival. It is like nowhere else, distinct in its setting, unique in its proposition. For the thousands who travel across land and sea to be there, the challenge is first how to survive where humans simply shouldn’t, and second how to do the event justice. In the summer of 2015 that was my challenge. Introduction I started with a canvas as blank and flat as the crusty, sun-baked alkaline landscape I would soon visit. With no predefined site, style, material or approach, there were almost no limits to what I could create there. Almost, but not quite: one inescapable, scopesetting limit was the £1,000 AHMM Travel Prize budget, and the looming deadline of the event’s start date four months away. These constraints established a technical definition for the artwork: whatever it was, I would need to make it, transport it 5,000 miles and install it in the desert for no more than £1,000. And soon. Two thought streams quickly emerged: the prosaic and the poetic. Both progressed in parallel and equally shaped the project. The prosaic thinking focused in detail on how to address those constraints with distinct boundaries: time, size and cost. Designing, manufacturing and assembling the artwork would all take time. On one hand, I could create something in London over a few months, package it up and quickly rebuild it in Nevada; on the other, I could arrange to have something built in America to be collected and erected in the desert. There were different twists on these two approaches that also needed to be considered, each presenting its own challenges. Time was intrinsically linked with size. Not living in Nevada, or even in the US, I had limited time to build out there, perhaps no more than a few days. If the artwork was large it could be broken down into a number of pre-manufactured pieces, but a larger artwork would also take longer Out on the Playa Over seven days a grand total of 30 plaques were awarded, less than hoped but quite an achievement considering the unexpected conditions. The project started, as I had decided beforehand, with the camp I was part of, Camp Cheeky Bollocks. Six of us had travelled together all the way from London to make our own mini-hacienda in the desert and, as the project was to be seen through my own eyes and follow my experience, it needed to start there. 006 Published January 2016 Title Black Rock City Heritage Author Allford Hall Monaghan Morris/ David Lewis Design AHMM Comms Team/ David Lewis The plaques arrive in Reno I cycled around the city and across the playa - the term for the open desert - with a basket containing a dozen or so plaques tied in with bungee cords, ready to discover the good, the bad and the ugly. A slow start saw Two Stroke, a pair of desert golf-andwhisky-game inventors, awarded the second plaque in the middle of a mild dust storm. The third was to a group of people who became our best ‘burner’ buddies for the week, proprietors of our ‘local bar’. Another bar was followed by a conjurer who stopped to help at a tame bike crash near our camp, but progress was slow. to make, longer to package, longer to ship and longer to handle at the other end. Size was significantly impacted by cost. Whilst there was a finite budget, there was no cap on the volume or mass of material that it would buy; some materials are very cheap and, bought in bulk, can be mashed together into a tower of trashiness. However, finer raw materials, in their unprocessed state, are not economical to acquire and machine, leading to something small. In the expanse of the desert a modest piece would be lost in the scale of it all, so size was important. Getting the balance between time, size and cost right was imperative but seemingly not straightforward. 1. Philosopher Martin Heidegger I was guided through the parallel poetic journey by the writings of the German philosopher Martin Heidegger. By chance I had been reading about him around the time I started thinking about applying for the Travel Prize and I had been struck by how Burning Man seemed to embody his ideas in a distilled form. Heidegger was a proponent of gaining a sense of being through discovery and experience, by understanding how our attachments to ‘things’ gives us the world we experience. Burning Man, a festival without stages, with infinite loci, a city that emerges in an inhospitable, inhumane desert landscape and disappears again in a week, where people come to simply be with others and share the tangible weaving of souls, is an ephemeral manifestation of his ideas of existence. Heidegger is also one of few philosophers to speak directly about architecture, most notably in Building Dwelling Thinking. He discusses I decided to make project-specific missions around the city throughout the day, instigating the encounters. Six plaques were awarded that day, including the Bureau of Misinformation, originally imagined as a group of camouflage-clad conspiracy theorists but eventually found to be one young man and his troop of scantily clad female friends. The pick of the day were Deborah Bloom and Steve Thompson, who showed enormous gratitude when awarded a plaque for simply relaxing on a bench beside a lamppost. A plaque ceremony took place during a sunrise rave in the deep playa, with nothing around but other ‘burners’ gyrating to the music booming out of a large wall-of-speakers art bus. Then the biggest dust storm in years hit and wiped out an entire day as everyone hid in their vehicles from the swirling apocalypse. Once the dust had blown through, I embarked on Big Saturday, the day I would fulfil the project’s promise. It started before dawn, with a cold bike ride in the dark out to the farthest place possible. There were a few stragglers there, two of whom were awarded a plaque for being sunrise enthusiasts as we welcomed dawn together. In the morning plaques were awarded to a peace maker up a geodesic tower, a bogus brass band, a spiritual game jester, a heavenly art car, a taciturn costume swapper and, most unremarkably, an enthusiastic bean dip eater, all in quick succession. In the afternoon, they were given to free hot dog stand chefs, to a friend from the seven hour night-time queue to get into the festival, to dedicated aluminium can recyclers, to an amateur lewd puppeteer. They were presented to sweet-dispensing lifesavers, to a man who simply gave me a high five as I cycled by and, finally, to a man I found trying to steal one of the city’s road signs. means of measuring the world not by using somewhat abstract scientific characteristics such as mass, volume, length and so on; instead he suggests that we will find true solutions to our myriad crises not through technology but through a consideration of what it is to be. He proposes a fourfold of earth, sky, mortals and divinities; each and all can be the focus of our appreciation of our existence, a measure of life. Why Heidegger? Well, why not? The more I read the more I was convinced that to state that something has become relevant to me, to demonstrate that I am attached to it, justified carrying his ideas forward. Investigating these fundamental ideas of postmodern thinking at their source allowed me to both progress my understanding of those other thinkers, architects and artists he influenced, and to uncover the meaning of Burning Man and its inhabitants. The two thought streams merged. Prosaically, to make something small seem big I realised I needed to take what was there and use that to enlarge whatever I was bringing. This was first born as a physical piece, and designs for a large balloon or kite were drafted to describe artworks inflated by the air. The idea then matured, developing into one that enlisted the greatest resource there: people. The intertwined narratives of the Burning Man faithful are the festival’s best side, its true heart, and the artwork could leverage this. Poetically, I had gained a sense of what was right. The artwork should not be a static, boastful structure standing proud. It shouldn’t be a mere object; it should mean something to others, it should belong to them. I wanted to celebrate other people for simply being. I wanted the project to be ephemeral, to bring with me something from my city to another, and to be part of the festival’s moneyless, gifting economy, indulging in these expressive moments of kindness. In time, a clear idea emerged from the mists of thought: I would establish myself as a one-man-band, ad hoc honour committee charged with celebrating the people I would meet on my journey by awarding them an inscribed plaque to be positioned high on their camp. Playa Story: Camp Mistakes Have Been Made This was our local bar, and each of my party discovered it by being enticed inside whilst cycling back from the toilet block. The invite came screaming out of a megaphone and we all succumbed, seduced by the offer of their house cocktail, The Suffering Bastard. That was one helluva strong drink. These plaques would create an urban infrastructure of their own, one that would disappear with Black Rock City, done and dusted. Many slim discs could be made and the cheapest of shipping options used: they could be taken as a second piece of baggage on my flights to Reno. The blue heritage plaques, and those in other colours and shapes that decorate our cities, are time portals through which we can imagine another moment, another person, another achievement. They offer an alternative addressee for a building, hinting at an extra temporal dimension to our urban landscape, one in which people lived and died before us, busy making our world. Establishing a blue plaque heritage programme in a desert city where people have just arrived, and will soon leave, taking everything with them, reinforces the desperate ephemerality in our being, an exercise in beautiful futility. Anatomy of a Plaque With the bones of the idea in place, further design development saw the right look and feel of the plaques gradually emerge. The shape was the first question to be answered, with the circular plaque design chosen for its strong sense of familiarity to me, a Briton, but also for the potentially unfamiliar sense to people across the Atlantic. In addition, the Burning Man urban plan is a truncated radial plan, and there was a gentle nod to the circle of life idea held by those who have lived in Nevada since long before the Europeans arrived. This title would sit proudly on each plaque, in the font used on the Burning Man website, Rockwell. This strong American typeface, An English Heritage plaque Heritage plaques play their part in upholding the notion of The Great Men of History, the idea that we should be most grateful to a select few rather than the thankful beneficiaries of the labours of millions. They award the winners in patriarchal times a neat and tidy marker of their inflated magnitude. Burning Man, in many ways simply a survival festival, is a true leveller where the whole city creates the whole city. Thus plaques would be awarded to anybody, for doing anything; any punk in that fine mess would do. Heritage plaques come in many different colours depending on the awarding body, so deviating from the English Heritage blue was possible without removing the link to such schemes. Yet, after considering many colours I returned to blue, but not just any blue: International Klein Blue. This vibrant, mesmerising tone was developed by artist Yves Klein and featured in scores of his pieces, covering canvases, sculptures and, rather famously, the naked bodies of young French women used as human brushes on large scale works. His use of the colour that has long attracted me - I also used this colour in a project at university - was in his exhibition titled The Void. A curtain dyed in the deep, rich and inviting blue marked the entrance to a gallery containing no further works of art, just bare walls and empty spaces. On this thin sliver of land, a crisply horizontal horizon dust-flat beneath an electric blue dome, the giving ceremonies would bring to the minds and bodies of the awarded a sense that there is something above us, moments when Heidegger’s fourfold of earth, sky, mortals and divinities is apparent and complete. 3. Yves Klein’s Anthropométrie Playa Story: Claire & Jason Gilles Friday was a wipe-out. An enormous, horizon-filling dust storm rapidly marched through the desert to cloud everything in a swirling taupe mist. I was far from the city when it struck, caught cycling round in a dreamlike abstract universe. Art cars and other lost wanderers would appear from nowhere and drift off out of sight, leaving me alone in the beigeness. Playa Story: Reena Lazar Even if you lay out a city as flat as a pancake and provide acres of space, people will always want to build high. Up a tower formed from five stacked geodesic domes I encountered Reena Lazar, also there for the view. In this gentle chaos I chanced upon Claire and Jason, equally bemused by the powdery world in which we were encased. For a brief moment we shared something, and it felt their spirit should be celebrated; their plaque reads Adventured Here. I cycled off into the dust storm, the perfect setting for the most ephemeral of the plaque stories. As with all the plaque awardees, I asked Reena what she would like written on the canvas and thought she was just another damn hippy when she replied Peace Maker. It turns out that’s her real world job; she makes peace as a consultant for various organisations in her home city. A chance discovery but one of the worthiest to be honoured by Black Rock City Heritage. Playa Story: Yujing Li Playa Story: Alex Matzner & Danny Hernandez Playa Story: Andrei Kuzin Sometimes you can make gold if you simply try to find it. A fitful night’s sleep saw me leave my camp before dawn to search out something special, alone. I cycled as far as I could, wrapped in all my clothes to fend off the bone-chilling cold. In the deep playa, beside a perception warping house made from mirrors, I found Alex and Danny. Andrei came to mean a lot more to me than most of the plaque awardees. We had met in the queue of trucks waiting to get into the festival, a ramshackle metal snake held sixty miles out in the middle of a pitch black desert for the duration of a whole night. To the side of us as we danced was Yujing Li, a clean-cut kid just out there by herself to dance the sun up into the sky. A gentle, quiet and happy soul, her plaque was inscribed with Sunshine Bringer. The English Heritage blue plaques are made by a single, somewhat idiosyncratic family in Cornwall. They are crafted from fine clay and delicately hand-painted, but I could not follow this route; heavy ceramics would be extremely difficult to transport 5,000 miles without some or all breaking apart, so other materials had to be considered for the Burning Man plaques. Polished blue mirror stainless steel discs were one early option; another was printed, blue- I felt that the plaques should be decorative, if not actually a little ostentatious: a touch tonguein-cheek, part of a ridiculously grandiose gesture at an event where the earnestness of the default world is put to one side. The honour committee I was embodying was thus given the grand title of Black Rock City Heritage, making me a punk grabbing his own part of civilisation, normally out of reach, and appropriating it. An artwork at Burning Man for the AHMM Travel Prize 2015 David Lewis Painting the plaques organisation; perhaps the committee comes back each year, born anew to celebrate a fresh set of good people. A series of laser-cut stencils and white spray paint were used to imprint the design on each of the fifty plaques. A stack of the best 35 – five a day awarded for the seven days of the festival - were then parcelled up into a cylinder that, by just a few millimetres, came within the airline’s maximum linear measurements for a second piece of baggage. 2. Artist Yves Klein Their small but sturdy wooden beach shack was our best shelter during the Friday dust storm, and also the scene of one of my group stripping naked to become a human whiteboard. We hung out many times over the week and the friendship was cemented when we travelled as one team to watch the Man burn and sing bawdy drinking songs. We were told that the best parties start around 6am, during sunrise when the air is cool and the sky tinged with pink and orange. We ventured out in the pitch-black night, our way lit only by the fairy lights on our bikes, into the deep playa to find a hundred or so people dancing by an art bus, its wall of speakers blasting out the music conjured by the DJ perched on top. The colour has come to represent absence and bodilessness, and for me would represent the ephemerality of a heritage scheme for a disappearing city. Together we celebrated the sunrise emerging over the plateau before us, eager for its rays to blast their warmth through to our marrow. We were all Sunrise Enthusiasts at that moment. Andrei gave me advice then and again the two other times during the festival that I visited his camp. He has the gravelly voice and biting, acerbic wisdom of a New York senior citizen, years before his time, and was much loved by the crew he corralled. An ephemeral friend I will probably never see again, but one who shone brightly for those brief moments. Adding the crest and phoenix dyed, biodegradable, pressed cotton urns - neatly tying in with the name of the festival; a third was bespoke blue circular road signs. All were rejected when found to be sadly far beyond the reach of the budget. The search for a far cheaper material eventually uncovered pre-stretched round canvases: light, thin and with the perfect diameter, available to buy in bulk. These could, of course, be painted so a paint matching International Klein Blue was sourced. Bristol Paints mix the exact colour and so one summer afternoon my kitchen became an unreal sea of blue as a total of 50 plaques were painted and laid to dry. Playa Story: Trixxy Amidst all the sonic and visual noise, amongst characters giving it all to fulfil one of the festival’s ten commandments, radical selfexpression, some people stand out. The embodiment of altruism, serenity and tenderness, Trixxy, clad in a whirling tie-dye outfit, was stood in the centre of one of the smaller circular plazas handing out red candy laces to anyone she could distract from their journey. She seemed as effortlessly human as a human can be. She belonged to nearby Camp Nice and asked, rather fittingly, to be titled Happiness Ambassador on her plaque. Trixxy was by far the most graciously appreciative plaque awardee. Playa Story: Matt Winn Matt ran a decidedly unprofessional advice booth on the side of the one of the quieter roads; he had a table and a cardboard sign. I stopped by for a session. In the few minutes I was sat at his booth, we went through some seriously deep stuff and Matt, with his powers of deduction, set the course for the rest of my life, should I choose to take it. Truth Seeker and Guidance Giver did not seem too grand a title. with straight, load-bearing serifs, has an appropriately grounded, wild west, non-modernist feel, but was also chosen because it made the unauthorised addition of urban infrastructure in this project even more like a cuckoo laying its egg in another’s nest. Other little touches finished the design. A circular crest of flames added to the tawdry conspicuousness, and a phoenix was added to form the Black Rock City Heritage logo. The phoenix, and not the death-signifying burning man found elsewhere on theme camp logos, was chosen to represent the continual rebirth of the heritage Each plaque would eventually be unique, marked with the name of the awardee, the date and their reason for being honoured. This customisation had to be quick and done without fuss. It would have to work in all conditions and when others might not have much time to spare, so a handful of white paint marker pens, normally used to mark industrial equipment, were also bought for the kit. One final preordained flourish would add a nod to the caring, tripped-out nature of the festival and mark the project as distinct in its own right: instead of writing Lived Here at the bottom to indicate that the blue plaque honours someone who resided at that particular address, the hippy anthem sat just above the phoenix would be Loved Here. Epilogue Credits Burning Man surpassed my high expectations. The wealth of creativity, all around you, shining brilliantly day and night, was astonishing. Black Rock City Heritage earned me so many extra hugs, so many smiles, so many cheers. People seemed genuinely touched and to bring the project to them felt like a privilege. I must be honest and admit that whilst many plaques were awarded I didn’t see any in place afterwards save for those at our camp and our local bar. I also don’t know if anyone else there spotted more than one or even a pattern but, hey, it’s a very big place. Black Rock City Heritage was my artwork at Burning Man 2015. It was wholly funded by the AHMM Travel Prize I won at the Spring Conference that same year. I am enormously grateful to all who have helped me get there and document it. Yet I felt part of festival, the wacky Brit in a blue tailcoat - or just shorts and braces, depending on the weather - who performed a silly but jolly ceremony and then rode off into the dusty distance. If I was to go again I would love to be part of a larger project. Some are incredible but clearly take teams working with greater resources for a much longer time. There’s so much to want to be involved with at Burning Man but you can only experience the little bit of it you make. For me, this was the best project of which I have been a part. For videos of all the ceremonies and more about the project, please visit: www.blackrockcityheritage.org Image credits: 1. Martin Heidegger in his hut at Todtnauberg, 1968 bpk/Digne Meller Marcovicz 2. Yves Klein at the shoot for a film of his Anthropométrie, 1960 bpk/Charles Wilp 3. Performance of Yves Klein’s Anthropométrie de l’époque bleue, 1960 bpk/Charles Wilp All other images by David Lewis Though my eyes be closed by the final Shadow that sweeps me off on the blank white day And thus my soul be rendered up By fawning time to hastening death; Yet memory will not abandon love On the shore where first it burned: My flame can swim through coldest water And will not bend to laws severe. Soul that was a prison to a god, Veins that fuelled such fire, Marrow that gloriously burned The body they will leave, though not its cares; Ash they will be, but filled with meaning; Dust they will be, but dust in love. Love Constant Beyond Death Francisco de Quevedo (1580-1645) Translated by Margaret Jull Costa 1 9 14 16 18 23 CAMP CHEEKY BOLLOCKS THE BUREAU OF MISINFORMATION BOGUS BRASS OASIS ART CAR LION TAMER LOVED HERE SOURCE OF RADICAL RIDICULOSITY ALEX MATZNER & DANNY HERNANDEZ PLAYED SWEET MUSIC HERE CREATORS OF A MOVING HAVEN, LOVED HERE CREATOR OF APPARENT HORIZON, LOVED HERE SUNRISE ENTHUSIASTS, LOVED HERE 2 10 19 24 TWO STROKE DEBORAH BLOOM & STEVE THOMPSON MOMMA DOC KAT THATCHER & ERIC KREIDER INVENTORS OF BURNING GOLF COSTUME SWAPPER, LOVED HERE RELAXED HERE LIFESAVERS, LOVED HERE 14 12 25 CAMP MISTAKES HAVE BEEN MADE BLACK ROCK CITY RECYCLE CAMP HOME OF THE ‘SUFFERING BASTARD’ SORTERS & CRUSHERS OF ALUMINIUM CANS, LOVED HERE La f Ko fing Sa ok l Jol ly Illu Ha sion n Ge ky P e a k Fre nk a k Er Sh s ow Do atz nn Ca ike r r Ba ny l Ar lyho ca o de Es pla na de 3 10:00 4 9:45 HAIR OF THE DOG 9:30 GAVE & LOVED HERE 13 Temple 2:00 18 TRIXXY 2:30 HAPPINESS AMBASSADOR, LOVED HERE 2:45 9:15 9:00 26 2:15 17 27 26 11 16 2 10 15 The Man 9 3:00 19 5 27 21 ADAM REI SIEGEL SPEEDO 3 8:30 MASTER CONJURER, LOVED HERE Center Camp 3:30 AMATEUR LEWD PUPPETEER, LOVED HERE 1 20 5 8:00 6 11 PEACE OF ASS CHAMPAGNE SNOCONE PROTECTORS OF THE BUM DISPENSERS OF HIGH CLASS SHAVED ICE 4 8 25 7:30 4:00 6 7 28 29 4:30 24 23 20 28 ANDREI THORP MATT WINN ENTHUSIASTIC BEAN DIP EATER, LOVED HERE TRUTH SEEKER & GUIDANCE GIVER, LOVED HERE 22 7:00 5:00 6:30 30 5:30 6:00 7 12 21 29 PAPA WITCH YUJING LI GEEWY BEAR PAINTER, LOVED HERE SUNSHINE BRINGER, LOVED HERE JELLY & LEAF E. GREENS 8 13 15 17 22 30 ARCTICA CLAIRE & JASON GILLES REENA LAZAR JARAD KUFELDT ANDREI KUZIN JUICE PEACE MAKER, LOVED HERE GAME JESTER, LOVED HERE GIVER, ADVISOR & LINE COMPANION, LOVED HERE SPREADER OF LOVE, LOITERED HERE PROVIDERS OF ICE, LOVED HERE ADVENTURED HERE MAKERS OF FINE HOT DOGS, LOVED HERE LOVER OF HUMANITY, LOVED HERE