I enjoyed this recent post from David Houle, a Futurist with an Art Degree, who was blown away by what he saw at his first Burn. Who? I feel like, with his accomplished career, I should’ve heard of him before:
I’m just a humble futurist without an Academy Award. But enough about me – back to David, and what he thought about Burning Man Fertility 2.0 2012:
As someone who has an art degree and has traveled the world looking at art I was absolutely stunned by the quality, creativity and shear uniqueness of art that was everywhere. It was hard not to think that I was looking at some of the best art in the world, free from the physical boundaries and the constriction of the art world and galleries. To look at magnificent, monumental pieces of art in the middle of a beautiful desert both in the summer sun and the light of the full (blue) moon was, at times, transcendent.
Our team was fortunate enough to stay at Sacred Spaces Village, one of the most prominent camps at Burning Man and certainly one of the most spiritual and inspirational in terms of all the seminars, workshops and endless sessions of yoga and ecstatic dance that went on all week. The Future Wow! team shot a documentary of Sacred Spaces Village, and are now in the early stages of editing and compiling footage. We hope the documentary will be finished by the end of the year and available for viewing early in 2013.
What is equally impressive is the freedom of spirit, the complete willingness to share and to gift and the depth of humanity and openness that is everywhere. It was a place of widespread, ongoing and intense self-discovery and letting go. One felt totally safe and free even amidst tens of thousands of complete strangers. It is the one of the only places I have ever been where, during practically every conversation, with someone you know or a complete stranger, eyes lock and hold during the entire conversation. Think on that and take a look wherever you go in the next 24 hours and you will see people looking away, checking a screen or avoiding eye contact. The depth of human interaction at Burning Man, even if just for seconds or a few minutes is full and fully present.
