Friday, September 21, 2007

Shawn's wedding and the Viral Meningitis

The Guys styling it out...
Liz and Mark looking good at the wedding


I'm editing out the Burning Man pictures for a PG audience - so I'll post those soon.

Shawn and Meghan's wedding was incredible - the ceremony was beautiful and the reception was a blast. I can't tell you how much fun it was to have all of my best friends from college together in one spot for such a joyous occasion - all of us as groomsmen too! What a hoot! Steve and Jesse even found a bridesmaid... fun fun fun.

The pictures from the wedding can be found here:
http://www.kodakgallery.com/I.jsp?c=14rdrxsi.7ym36tqy&x=0&y=d9b3fv

We're now in recovery mode - especially Liz - who ended up catching Viral Meningitis over the weekend. It's been horrendous.

Hope all is well.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

More B-man Art

These two were also very impressive:
http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2007/08/big-rig-jig.html
http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2007/09/burning-man---h.html

We're Back from the Burn



We'll be posting our pics soon - it was another amazing experience. Our horizons have been broadened and our view of the world and the creativity within it expanded...

Closer videos of the same explosion:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9d5JWEUEHA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_mWRIY45Yk


The video above is from "Crude Awakening" which is explained below:

The brains behind the tallest structure ever built at Burning Man plan to produce the tallest fire ever seen at the event as well -- a 1,000-foot column of flame, primed by 900 gallons of jet fuel and fed by 2,000 gallons of liquid propane. Its creators hope this massive flame will send a powerful message about the oil economy.

The piece is called Crude Awakening. It's the brainchild of Bay Area artists Dan Das Mann and Karen Cusolito. Its collaborative execution brings together eight different artists who have previously received art grants from Burning Man, and involved the help of 180 different people.

The centerpiece is a 99-foot-tall wooden oil derrick that was receiving final touch-ups Wednesday afternoon, including the completion of the steps inside that allow attendees to climb to the top.

To the left of the derrick stand eight metal sculptured human figures, most of whose surfaces are made of connected metal rings, each designed with their own different participant-activated fire effects via propane tubing. The statues are 540 percent of the size of a normal human. Some are standing, hands waved in supplication; many prostrate in various ways. All of them, Das Mann says, emulate the prayer posture of some religious tradition.

The piece is meant to dramatize the worshipful relationship and dependence modern man has toward oil. The idea occurred to the married couple during their honeymoon in India two years ago, and fit in with this Burning Man's environmentally minded theme of "Green Man."

The piece's fruition comes in a performance Friday evening, to be aired live on Current TV beginning at 10 p.m. PST. At its climax, four different containers at each corner of the tower will shoot a total of 900 gallons of jet fuel (given away by NASA as unusable for its purposes, Das Mann says) to engulf the top of the structure in a huge fireball.

Seconds later up the center of the derrick, 2,000 gallons of liquid propane in a pipeline stretching out to the derrick's right will shoot out at once through a remote-control 5-inch pneumatic ball valve. The piece's creators figure this should create a 1,000-foot-high column of flame.

The detonation of the piece will create 2.4 gigawatts of energy, which Das Mann and Cusolito say is enough to "power the entire Bay Area for one minute."

The artists realize that it might seem indulgent to burn so much fuel for art meant to dramatize our warped relationship with fuel. They understand those concerns. But they stress the personal conservation efforts about environmental and carbon impact that working on the piece created in all the 180 people involved, which they expect to continue.

The fuel the piece consumes only amounts to an ounce or so of fuel per attendee at the event, they note. Cusolito, who says she is thought of by her friends as somewhat of an "environmental Nazi," says she thinks of Crude Awakening as if "all the energy I have not consumed by living the way I do, it's almost as if I get credits" to use the fuel to "make the biggest environmental statement I could make in my lifetime." The pair hopes the message will reach far beyond the 45,000 or so who might see the finale at Burning Man.

Das Mann and Cusolito stress the massively collaborative nature of the project, including fire work from Donya Parkinson and Joe Bard of Pyro Kinetics, and Mark Perez's carpentry work on the derrick, among many others.