How Burning Man Spawned a Solar Gold Rush

Nationswell has a great story on Black Rock Solar:

At the end of Nevada’s annual arts festival in 2007, a small group of volunteers donated a solar power array to a local school. Since then, they’ve built more than 70 installations and changed state law in the process.

When the nonprofit Food Bank of Northern Nevada scraped together enough donations to expand to a brand-new 61,000-square-foot facility in McCarran, Nev., in 2008, organizers hoped to power the place with the state’s omnipotent rays.

BlackRockSolar_FoodBankofNorthernNV_JessicaReeder-10-680x499It was a pipe dream, though. The Food Bank, a distribution and outreach center, didn’t have enough funding left over to pay for a solar project, even one that would eventually pay for itself, as such installations can over time. And even if they could get a rebate from the state utility to help pay for the project, Nevada law at the time capped those incentives to solar installations smaller than 30 kilowatts — not nearly enough to make sense for a facility as large as the food bank. That’s when Black Rock Solar stepped in. The Reno-based nonprofit, spawned at the Burning Man arts festival in 2007, provides low-cost energy to underserved communities. Black Rock put relentless pressure on the state’s Public Utility Commission to remove the cap, according to Food Bank’s president and CEO, Cherie Jamason. Their efforts paid off, and when the agency flipped on the lights a few months later, the juice came from a 150-watt solar array on the roof, installed by the very group that had started out as a bunch of “burners.”

That small cadre of volunteers — with backgrounds in solar energy and construction —discovered that they could position themselves as the ideal middlemen between NV Energy, the state-run utility handing out incentives for solar installations, and Nevada groups that didn’t know money existed or how to take advantage of it.

solar array _ 350Now, seven years later, Black Rock Solar has 28 employees and has built 72 projects worth roughly $20 million, pushing more than 4 megawatts onto the grid, enough to power 4,000 homes. About a third of the projects have gone to Indian tribes, says Patrick McCully, Price’s successor and Black Rock’s executive director. The rest went to schools, community colleges, churches, food banks, homeless shelters and even some government buildings such as wastewater treatment plants. Black Rock Solar — funded entirely by utility rebates, grants and donations — is now the nation’s second-largest nonprofit installer of solar arrays.

[more…]

It’s great to see Black Rock Solar out there doing so much good in the world. We hope the new non-profit Burning Man Project can learn from their example, and leave a lasting trace in the community.

 

Embrace Embrace

Embrace is going ahead – and looking for a home after Burning Man. Unlike the Temple design they were initially pitching for, now they are building art that can survive to be enjoyed by others outside the burn. We hope to see much more of that in the future. Embrace is looking for a good home post-Burn, as well as another $60,000 – if you can help them, get in touch. It’s seven stories tall, which might create some insurance issues. They already beat their $47,000 Kickstarter goal. According to this interview, they have raised in total $140,000 of their $200,000 total goal, including a 2014 Burning Man Art Honorarium grant. This project is going ahead, and it is going to be significant. It’s from the crew who brought you the Pier, operating out of Vancouver, BC; Portland, OR; and Reno, NV.

Matt Schultz is the director of The Generator in Reno. He shares some of the thinking behind the Embrace, and discusses the “hetero-normative backlash” the piece triggered – apparently, mostly from straight white guys…

 

Story from IgniteChannel:

Matt Schultz Gives the People of Burning Man a Giant Hug with His Sculpture Embrace

 

Embrace

Embrace Sketch by Killbuck

 

Evocative works of art embrace us; they inspire action, thought, and emotion; and even subvert the dominant paradigm. Matt Schultz and the Pier Group’s 2014 Burning Man sculpture, Embrace, embodies all of those qualities. Rising from the playa, Embrace is a 72- foot sculpture of two people entwined in a bond of affection and acceptance. The wooden, cathedral-like structure will cradle all who enter and provide a space for celebrating relationships of all kinds and remembering, with joy, those who can no longer be physically embraced.

The Pier Group have created wonderful art on the playa before, including The Pier, Pier 2, and the Ichthyosaur Puppet Project.

Matt is also the Executive Director of an inclusive art space called The Generator, located in Sparks (Reno), Nevada. This is the heart of the Embraceproject, but the actual hearts that will light the inner beauty of the couple are being created by crews in Vancouver and Portland.

The Ignite team had the pleasure of speaking with Matt about his inspiration for Embrace and the challenges of building a large sculpture at Burning Man.

Is this project going to be almost like a second Temple?

Matt: We have a huge dialogue behind all of this. We wanted to try to take the idea of Temple and flip it a bit away from so much of the feeling of this release from death. I think it is release in that way that you kind of let it go and forget about it. We wanted people to think about those that they care about.

Instead of thinking about loss, we wanted people to smile for the good times they shared with people. That’s why Embrace, for us, is about the moment. It’s a Temple dedicated to “right now.” It’s a Temple that gives for your relationships in the moment. Within the context we originally defined for Temple, we wanted to embrace and define a broader experience for participants when it comes to relating to death and sorrow and despair.

We want to give people a palette for some more positive emotions, too, in relationship to that. This project has been straddling these two worlds and one of the worlds it has been straddling is this traditional need that the Temple appeals to. It’s a core functional piece of our city. The Temple allows a lot of us who don’t have religion, who don’t have an organized body to turn to, to have a place to express that grief, to express a sense of spirituality, to release from challenges that we don’t have anywhere else to go to. That was the kind of first place we were straddling with Embrace.

The second place we were stepping to was that we wanted to create a new space at Burning Man – a space that is focused on the here and now – being present in your relationships, being present with the people you love, with the people you hate, being present in your relationship with yourself. We really feel like that part of the idea was so complementary to the first idea. You have your release, that kind of time when you let go, then you have the analysis of it, the chance to take time to think and reflect on those moments in your life. I really like that duality.

I think initially when we didn’t get Temple, we as a crew were pretty bummed out, but a lot of our crew were 50/50. Some of us wanted Temple, some of us didn’t. I think maybe it was an ego blow for us more than anything, but once we realized that we weren’t the Temple, we found a lot of joy in it. Not being Temple is something that I never realized would have a positive nature to it.

When we were vying for Temple, we had a lot of really great positive feedback about our project, but within that positive feedback, we had a handful of mean, negative, dark things said about this project. That was really challenging. None of us are getting paid to do this project. We are doing it as a giant “thank you” to a community who opened their hearts to us and welcomed us in.

We saw elements of the same community shunning us and telling us we had horrible ideas, yelling and screaming at us and being hurt by what we were proposing. I can only speak for myself, but part of the reason I started doing art at Burning Man is that it was the first community where I felt welcomed  in and where I felt I had a real home. The Pier and the ship are so innocuous. They’re fun, but they are more pieces that just evoke senses of wonder. They are part of a dream scape. They’re pieces of surreal thrown on the playa that don’t actually elicit any strong emotions outside of the childlike desire to explore.

Embrace is certainly a more interesting piece from my perspective. It was challenging reading some of the Facebook threads and feeling like people really wanted to attack me for this idea.

  

That’s too bad that has to happen. Nobody can every please everyone, with anything that they do, but to be attacked by people is sad, especially since your project is all about love. What’s to complain about?

Matt: The people who were complaining had a realistic complaint. Most of the people were complaining about things they dealt with in the real world that they felt were reflected in my art piece. One of the biggest kind of critiques leveled against it was that it was too hetero-normative, which was a term that I was not familiar with before I started this project.

That took me for a loop because I have always kind of struggled with how I identified within my gender norms. While I am very much male, there are times when I am far too female for normal society. I’ve been critiqued my whole life for that. When we designed Embrace, we designed it to be much more androgynous. We didn’t want it to be a man and a woman; we wanted it to be a sculpture where people could identify with it any way that they liked. If they wanted, it could be a mother and a son, a father and a grandpa, a husband and a wife, or brothers or sisters. At the same time, we wanted to make sure that it still seemed human. I didn’t want it to be too incredibly neutral. I didn’t want them to look like a sculpture of a pair of elves. So I wanted to have some musculature, some curves and some shape.

The smaller one is more slender, but the smaller one has a broader chest and no hips, while the larger one is more muscular with a much shallower chest and broader hips. They both have androgynous features and they both have gender-specific features.

It was really funny because most of the conversations I’ve had, people say, it’s clearly a man and a woman because one is taller than the other. I can’t count the number of people I’ve looked at and said, name one relationship you’ve had in your life where you are the same size as the other person. Size does not delineate gender.

That’s so weird because I’ve been writing about transgender issues lately. I’m not transgendered, but my friend is and some other people l know are. I know that transgender people face a lot of challenges, but from the messages I get from them, I doubt they would be upset by Embrace.

Matt: Most of the people complaining have been straight white men. There is this projection of identity which is very interesting. A large majority of the friends that I have are kind of outside of the hetero norm – they see a lot of positive in this piece. Within that, as an artist, I don’t want everyone to love my piece. I had to learn to grow a thicker skin. If I’m going to be disappointed that people that are throwing barbs at me for making a piece that compels them to like it or not like it, I can’t at the same time be happy, or compelled, or so proud that a dialogue is forming from the piece.

I think I have to accept that when making a piece of art, you’re inherently communicating a message and communicating it very loudly, at least when you are building on the scale that we are. We are screaming the concept at the top of our lungs, but we’re not refining that concept. We’re letting people choose what that concept is.

I don’t know if I really have a right to complain about that concept in that manner because of the simple fact that the narrative is beautiful and blossoming. A good narrative should have both negative and positive aspects to it, and that’s what I always wanted to do with my art. If all you want is to make innocuous art that no one complains about, you aren’t creating any conversation.

Option two is you can create interesting art that some people are going to hate and then they are going to reflect that hate upon me. There isn’t a lot of middle ground there, especially with the American relationship to art. At the same time, if I am going to be yelling from the top of my lungs and building some giant sculpture dedicated to relationships, I should expect a little blowback from people who have had difficulty with relationships.

I don’t think people realize this, but Embrace is built by a bunch of loners and outcasts who just wanted to belong. I think we formed this group of artists that we have here because we wanted to create a place where anyone could come and belong and we could do something incredible and build something really fantastic. Embrace encompasses this bigger idea. Embrace is a project that at the end of the day is less about the final result and more about the process with the community, friends, neighbors, with new people from different countries, with men and women, children and the elderly. It’s this chance for all of us to come together and make something and smile and laugh and make new friends and share hugs and stare at this giant thing we’ve built at the end of the day. And smile and laugh and do it again.

 

The Interior of Embrace with Two Hearts

The Interior of Embrace with Two Hearts Sketch by Killbuck

And you are actually working with people in Vancouver and Portland – different groups working together. How does that work?

Matt: What we did with the ship, we tried to create more of an open collaboration and we created a loose framework of what we needed to populate the inside of it and we had our satellite crews populating it and that worked very well. What we are doing on Embrace is, we opened up the collaboration even more, so Kevan Christiaens and myself thought it would be an original idea for the project to be these two giant tree people in an embrace as cathedrals inside.

Kelsey Owens, a dear friend of ours, had a dream that they had giant hearts inside of them, so we integrated that. Another friend, Bernie Beauchamp, thought it would be a great to have a hole in the top, so you could see the stars. What we did and what we are continuing to do on this project is welcome feedback and integrate it. It has this chance to be the whole crew’s project; it’s not just my project.

We have two hearts. We already had this established crew in Vancouver – a bunch of dear friends who worked on multiple projects with us. We’ve had a small contingent of crew members in Portland, so we figured we’d have a Portland and Vancouver crew and they can build the hearts. The only guidance on the hearts was that I wanted them to be a human heart shape, not a cartoon shape and I would like them to be some kind of chandelier light-creating source that was about the size of a small car. They also had to be a certain weight. They’ve just developed from there independently. I have no idea what the hearts are going to look like. It’s really incredible seeing that kind of collaboration open up and to have three crews in different cities working on this project.

Can you tell me about the Generator, where you are building Embrace?

Matt: I’m the executive director of the Generator. We’ve got four board members and our funder. We wanted to create a space where all the tools and resources were accessible for anyone to use and anyone to create with. We wanted to carry the ethos of Burning Man, most importantly being open and inclusive and de-commodified to a real world space to see how it would work.

It’s been an absolutely incredible experiment. The number of projects and amazing pieces of art and the people that have come through here who have learned and done something new is absolutely phenomenal.

Embrace

Embrace Sketch by Killbuck

You made your crowdfunding goal, but what do you need in the way of support or volunteers?

 

Matt: We need to raise another $60 thousand to fund this project. We’ve raised about $140 thousand, but the project cost is about $200 thousand. We are looking for volunteers. Embrace is not burning, so at this point, we need to find a place in northern Nevada or northern California that would be a good home for it. If someone is willing to donate a piece of property where we can create a sculpture park or if someone wants it on their private property, they should ask us about the prospects of doing that.

Read IgniteChannel’s full interview here.

Front Page News in Reno

We brought you news yesterday of Burning Man’s recent presence on the front page of the Lovelock Review-Miner. Well, it seems like the Reno Gazette Journal wants to get in on the action too, showing their support today for the event with a full-page color spread.

rgj

The paper makes note of the “Renossance” term we first told you about here.

Hundreds traveled from all over the world in early April to meet in a tucked away art and event space in the Mission District of San Francisco.

A bobbing sea of top hats, fur, colored wigs and dreadlocks ebbed into rows of seats.

The room buzzed with excitement and recognition as regional representatives shared hellos, hugs and travel stories before the eighth annual Burning Man Global Leadership Conference began.

Much like the Technology, Education and Design (TED) talks and conferences, the Global Leadership Conference brings Burners together for four days to share their inspiring and innovative stories and experiences.

The goal: to continue to propel Burning Man principles, culture and artistic expression throughout the world.

“I think what Burning Man brings is an experience to enjoy life; it’s a neat journey and it has brought me outside of myself,” Boston Burner Peter Durand said. “One of the principles that resonates with me is radical inclusion. I’m a middle class, urban, white, vanilla-bread person and I surround myself with folks who have piercings, tribal tattoos, colored hair and fuzzy clothing. It pushes me because it’s all different.”

The idea for the Burning Man Regional Contact Network began in 1996 after the population of Black Rock City spiked to 8,000 people. The community aspect created at the event also left Burners feeling displaced once they returned home after a week in the desert.

They wanted to connect to one another outside of the annual event and they wanted to expose their local communities and cities to Burning Man culture.

These regional groups often base their events and regional “burns” on the 10 principles Burning Man founder Larry Harvey crafted as a reflection of the community’s ethos and culture of the event. Those principles are: radical inclusion; gifting; decommodification; radical self-reliance and self-expression; communal effort; civic responsibility; leave no trace; participation; and immediacy.

“It seems like only yesterday that we wanted to be a city,” Burning Man Project education director Stuart Mangrum said at the conference. “Now, it seems like other cities want to be us.”

As a member of the Burning Man community since the 1990s, Mangrum recalled the process for determining what outside elements would be brought into Black Rock City in the Black Rock Desert.

“We had a very conscious process of thinking of the things that we wanted to take with us when we were building the city and what we wanted to leave behind,” said Mangrum, a member of the San Francisco Cacophony Society. “No one had any interest in bringing a shopping mall along, or the sports marina or performance hall. After a lot of late night discussions, bottles of wine and cigarettes, we boiled the experience down to three simple, essential items — coffee, toilets and a newspaper.”

Mangrum said that is how he was persuaded to found the playa’s first daily newspaper, the “Black Rock Gazette.”

“Here we are, 20 years later, and we are a city,” Mangrum said. “One thing that’s for sure about Black Rock City is that it’s never going to be big enough for all the people that want to be there. Demand exceeds supply for Burning Man, and I guess that’s where you guys come in and why we’re all here: how to get more Burning Man in the world.”

morris burner sideThroughout the past year, two Burning Man-inspired concepts have recently taken root in Reno. The first is The Generator, a community art and builder space. Then there’s the Morris Burner Hotel located on Fourth and Record streets. Both organizations gave a presentation on “Renossance” at the conference presented, showing how Burning Man has influenced growth and ingenuity in Northern Nevada.

The region is no stranger to Burning Man culture, Burners or the art and community that has sprouted out of the annual event. Tens of thousands caravan through Reno and Fernley each year on their trek to the desert.

“Reno is very much a Burner city and this is adding another level to our amazing community,” said Jim Gibson, owner of the Morris Burner Hotel. “This was an old, decrepit building, and through community involvement, we gutted it in about six months.”

The theme of what a strong Burner community can do for a city was also illustrated in The Generator executive director Matt Schultz’s talk to the conference.

“We talk about this renaissance in Reno, and I think the biggest, most important thing is this it’s not something that happened in a small city. This is fire that can catch every day in our own cities,” Schultz said. “This is something that every person in this room creates at Burning Man and we can take that collective effort and do something that will not only stun the world, but will seriously change it.”

Having attended the Burning Man Global Leadership Conference since its first year, Durand said he has seen it grow each year starting from about 60 people in an office at Burning Man headquarters.

Overall, Durand believes the focus of the conference has shifted and it’s not just about educating Burners to start regionally focused events. Instead, it’s about building leaders in communities.

“This is the really inspiring stuff and it’s here to activate and get people thinking; have people walk away saying, ‘I can do that or I should be up on stage next year,'” Durand said. “I think it really does energize people.”

From the inspiration that is created within the city walls of Black Rock City to the culture and community Burners are attempting to spread around the globe, Durand said one certainty comes out of the conference — Burning Man changes lives.

“Our innate nature is that differences are bad — that’s how we survived — we attack what we don’t know,” Durand said. “This forces me to be more open to life in a way that I had never been had I walked down the ‘normal path.’ I’m never going to space, but to be able to explore it within humanity, what I never could’ve or otherwise would’ve, is a nice thing.”

BURNING MAN REGIONAL FACTS

• There are 55-60 official Burning Man regional events each year.

• In 2013, official regional events were held in 13 countries including US, Canada, South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, China, Korea, Ireland, Spain, Russia, Sweden, United Kingdom (London and Wales have separate events).

• The largest one is in South Africa, called AfrikaBurn, which ran April 28 to May 4. Last year, it had 8,000 participants. (www.afrikaburn.com)

• About 30 percent of official regional events on average are held outside of the U.S.

• There are currently 222 active regional contacts and meta regional contacts.

How, exactly, these regionals are going to stun and change the world… was either not on the agenda…or was reserved for late night ceremonies in underground bunkers. As Larry Harvey says “it’s a self service cult, wash your own brain”. Maybe by next year’s conference, the vision will be clearer.