The massive structure at the heart of everything was the Burning Man, standing on a spaceship, inviting participants to imagine an encounter with a vastly different culture and how it might change our self-understanding.
NEVADA---Burning Man, the weeklong festival in the northern Nevada desert, is one of the largest religious rituals in the western world. We danced, created and destroyed things together. We talked, cried, yelled and sat in silence. We came to the holy desert from wildly different places, but even in our ecstasy and despair, mostly we were one – like the future city that John of Patmos calls the New Jerusalem. I talked about God with Vedic priestesses, Unitarians, yogis, Quakers, entheogen voyagers, Episcopalians, Hindus, Roman Catholics, shamans, atheists and Zen teachers. I met people there who hate Christianity, people who, often for good reasons, associate it with bigotry and condemnation. This year’s theme, “Cargo Cult,” refers to religions established in the Pacific theater during World War II, when islanders first experienced the tremendous wealth and material power of American soldiers. [link]
NEVADA---Every year for one week, bold, super-sized works of art spring to life in one of the harshest yet most starkly beautiful settings imaginable … the Black Rock Desert of Nevada. Since its start in 1986, the festival has become the largest outdoor art festival in North America. Last week, more than 65,000 people attended the one-week event. KQED collected photos of the art and crowds in Storify. [link]
Burning Man has just ended and surreal images are beginning to emerge, revealing the magic that took place on the playa this year. Check out this drone's eye view as it flies over some 68,000 participants, amazing art installations and the changing desert scenery of Burning Man. [link]