By: MACK REED
TIMES STAFF WRITER
They say this, those who gravitate year after year to this sun-blasted
wasteland like bedazzled moths to the promised flames of the Burning Man
Festival: You can't put it in a box.
Everyone tries, but labels fail: Road Warrior Meets Woodstock. Arts
festival, survival test, mosh pit, pyro-jam, cyber-klatch. Disneyland for
weirdos.
This year, it was all of these, but like a virus morphing to survive, it is
mutating and growing in the face of all the forces that would kill it.
What began 11 years ago with San Francisco conceptual artist Larry Harvey
and a few friends torching an effigy on a beach to purge the pain of his
doomed romance has blossomed, this year clustering an estimated 10,000 to
12,000 souls in this Godforsaken desert 90 miles northeast of Reno for a
five-day cultural brawl that culminated in the wee hours of Monday morning.
Early on, a ragtag tent city is splattered here at the elegant feet of the
plywood-boned, neon-veined Burning Man himself, who stands as mute totem. Not
burning. Not yet.
First, his acolytes from San Francisco, Los Angeles and other points far
away must roar across the trackless, sun-hammered expanse of this ancient lake
bed, trailing ochre plumes of dust. They must pitch camp on an unforgiving,
107-degree, 400-square-mile frying pan of cracked alkali mud that atomizes
into fine, nose-clogging grit at the merest brush of tire or puff of breeze.
For five days and nights, this seething mass of humanity must use
machinery, explosives, glitter, drugs, gasoline, iconoclasm and noise to
commit what can only vaguely be described as art--their offering to the
Burning Man's single credo: No spectators, only participants.
Then, and only then, does this mob of club ravers, performance artists,
hippies, gun lovers, neoprimitives, gearheads, firebugs and techno-geeks fully
congeal into the community that marches out Sunday night to the edge of what
has become Black Rock City to lay torch to the Burning Man.
On Sunday afternoon, Harvey stands at center camp, chugging mineral water
and fairly cackling at what he has wrought. Some mourn the population
explosion from last year's 6,000 as an influx of passive, slack-jawed gawkers
and the death of Burning Man cool.
Harvey looks out at the pro-Day-Glo activists chanting, "If you're not
bright, you're dull," at the ornately painted nude men bicycling past and the
TV camera crews sucking it all in, and grins the grin of a proud agitator.
"I welcome the large numbers," he says. "Because if we can do this and
survive--if nothing else--it will prove how powerful a force culture can be if
it's given a chance to flower."
Someone bellows, "Burn the m----------r!" and Harvey laughs. "I love
hearing that."
But as Burning Man grows, so does its reputation, and the burden of sweat,
planning and diplomacy its organizers must bear for it to exist. The $35
ticket cost pays for chemical toilets, generators, sound systems and a
blizzard of informational fliers, plus a $1.50 daily fee per person to the
Federal Bureau of Land Management for the use of the playa.
Early in the week, Chris Campbell clambers over the Burning Man, fretting
over the festival's potential to collapse under its own weight. He has been
trouble-shooting neon, checking rigging and wiring fireworks to the
sculpture--the fifth he has been commissioned to build in his San Francisco
backyard.
"I don't see how it can get any bigger," he says over the din of vehicles
rumbling nonstop into camp. "The logistics are just too much."
Each year, Pershing County sheriff's deputies bust a few more belligerent
drunks and dopers, the BLM faces a few more tons of unwanted trash, and
medical helicopters airlift out a few more victims of heat prostration or drug
overdose.
This year saw Burning Man's first fatality, when San Francisco neon artist
Michael Furey, 37, motorcycled into camp with his headlamp dark after a night
of drinking in nearby Gerlach, according to authorities, and slammed head-on
into a van in the omnipresent haze of playa dust. Three other people were
seriously injured early Monday, one critically, when a car drove over their
tents.
"I think there's a general consensus . . . that the Burning Man Festival
has outgrown itself," says Ron Skinner, the weary sheriff of Pershing County,
vowing to stop Burning Man 1997 from taking place without radical changes. "My
whole, entire staff is just totally burned out from the last five days. We're
a small department that serves 4,700 to 5,000 people, and we're just not
equipped to handle 10,000 party-goers. . . . The rebellion and indulgence is
really replacing the art aspect of the whole event."
The more the media hypes the Burning Man (discovered this year by "Inside
Edition" and the BBC), the more static he draws: Some Christians call him
pagan. Some women call him sexist. Some African Americans say he reeks of Klan
cross-burnings.
Jeff Holmes, a Boulder Creek, Calif., Internet specialist, sees an
energetic cross-pollination of neotechnologists, performance artists,
mechanics and free thinkers--and the potential for the whole exuberant,
inebriated mess to reach critical mass and melt down.
"It's balanced on a knife edge," he says. "But you know what? It's going to
go on regardless."
*
At stake, some say, is the soul of the Burning Man. A Russian immigrant
woman, her face adorned with a rainbow sticker, sidles up to Harvey one
afternoon and grills him about whether all this fire, satanic myth making and
"devilish, sinful things" are only nurturing evil.
"I don't see a whole lot of devilish, sinful things going on," says Harvey,
who masterminded Helco, a satirical corporate entity of mass consumerism and
credit card culture headed by Satan himself. Motto: "Enjoy now. Pay later.
Much later."
"The moral person contemplates evil," Harvey tells her carefully. "The evil
person commits it. And a person without a sense of humor can't distinguish
between the two. . . . I know a lot of people who live in Marin County and
contemplate spirituality and never get out of the hot tub."
If nothing else, Burning Man is as much a jape as a celebration of the
bizarre. The Disgruntled Postal Workers prowl the camp in a barking, flashing
Buick, delivering copies of the camp's Black Rock Gazette with plastic Uzis
and surly snarls. A transsexual accordionist belts out a hilariously bawdy
song abut her transformation from man to "white trash whore."
The desert itself--the limitless reach of dusty playa--encourages freedom
of thought and deed.
And the life cycle of Burning Man culture maps itself onto the desert's
ruthless clock. Mornings--if a little bleary from the night before--are
tranquil, cool and bright. Early risers go solo on costumed walkabouts: one in
a green velvet baby doll, another in a transparent gauze djellaba and many in
nothing but shoes.
Some pilot their toys. A fuzz-cloaked dirt bike shaped like a giant rat, a
shark-finned van, a motorized couch with a reading lamp tagging along on robot
treads. Hard-core artists labor in the rising heat. They slather mud onto a
baroque castle of rebar and chicken wire, fine tune the fuel flow on their
flamethrowers, wire explosives to blood-daubed portraits of Tom Cruise and Jim
Carrey, and weld rusty saw blades onto a monstrous, pedal-driven juggernaut.
Then afternoon comes and the desert speaks. Winds kick up choking dust and
the heat swells, splitting the crowd in two: those who crash beneath sunshades
and lean-tos to store energy for the all-night insanity. And those who commit
insanity now.
A skateboarder with a megaphone rumbles across the playa at 20 mph,
shouting directions to the truck driver towing him. Cursing sailors steer a
Winnebago pirate ship through the heat haze, dragging a huge stuffed Barney
doll. A leering silver shark car lurches up behind and chomps Barney to fluff.
*
Steve Lerner, of the Irrational Geographic Society, extols the power of his
Alien Repellent Device, a silver pyramid with flashing lights. He points to a
reddish smear on one of its corrugated sides. "It's like a bug zapper. Do you
agree that playa dust is white? That there is no red dust anywhere out here?
There is alien blood splattered on the side of this, my friend."
A bowling ball-wielding unicyclist pounds a typewriter to scrap. A white
plastic garden of spoons sprouts from the desert.
Night falls, and the sound systems kick in, pumping out acid house, space
jazz and jungle dubs. Bands roar onto the stage; !Tchkung! a tribe of
bare-chested, hard-drumming, fire-eating eco-zealots, rage against
clear-cutting and chain saws.
A bare-chested mime couple act out an increasingly invasive doctor's visit
that decays into a body-piercing burlesque and culminates when she draws blood
from his arm and smears it over both their faces, all to the warped tune
wheezing from topless transsexual Baby Dee's accordion.
Then, a naked cast of more than 100 satyrs, demons, wraiths and nymphs in
the gothic opera "The Arrival of Empress Zoe" caper around the mud castle, the
huge oak logs inside its turrets now ablaze and its gargoyles belching gouts
of flame.
And on the final night, when everyone has danced and sang and built and
painted and drunk and drugged and smashed and burned all they can, they stream
out across the cooling basin to watch the Burning Man himself burn in an
explosion of fireworks, wax-soaked burlap and bursting neon tubes.
And, thus anointed with ashes, mud and dust, they lay plans for next year.
PHOTO: On the festival's final night, when everyone has partied all they can,
they watch the Burning Man go up in an explosion of fireworks and bursting
neon tubes. Festival antics include some pretty creative vehicles.
PHOTOGRAPHER: ALAN HAGMAN / Los Angeles Times
Type of Material:
Descriptors: FESTIVALS; NEVADA -- CELEBRATIONS;
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