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Burning Man: Art in the Desert | 
enlarge | Author: A. Leo Nash Creator: Daniel Pinchbeck Publisher: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $10.49 You Save: $19.46 (65%)
New (37) Used (13) from $10.49
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 34205
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 160 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 11.8 x 8.7 x 0.9
ISBN: 0810992906 Dewey Decimal Number: 394.250979354 EAN: 9780810992900 ASIN: 0810992906
Publication Date: June 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: This book is in Brand NEW and in Perfect MINT Condition. The book is in stock and available for Immediate Dispatch from one of our SIX Warehouses in the United Kingdom. We aim to get your items to you FAST, Approximate Timings: - UK=Within a Week, EU= Within 2 Weeks, USA & ROW=Within 3 Weeks. We have an excellent customer service department and we are here to help. Limited stock left at this BARGAIN PRICE - so Buy Now! Rest Assured your dealing with an Experienced UK Based Book Selling Company. Invoice Sent with Every Item!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description For one week in August the Burning Man Festival in Nevadas Black Rock Desert brings people together in a spirit of self-reliance and creativity. Art has become the defining feature of Burning Man, as the festival continues to be a testing ground for a growing circle of artists seeking engaged audiences. Their most compelling works are large-scale constructions that are burned at the end of the festival, and radically altered vehicles, or art cars.
Art at Burning Man, like the experience of being there itself, is a way of being outside routine existence: People return home rejuvenated and inspired to seek ways to express the spirit of the festival in their everyday lives. For more than a decade, A. Leo Nash has been creating a photographic document of this work, and in his photographs we see the wellspring of a new art movement.
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| Customer Reviews:
Its the art, stupid April 26, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
So much of the photogprahy of Burning Man is all glitz and surreal glamour, with a big measure of breast often thrown in. Yeah it's a big party with all sorts of wacky and interesting costumes and bright sights, but the real soul of the thing is the making of the art.
Public art is always a gift to its community. The type of art that has grown out there, especially in its scale and ambition, often demands substantial gifts from the community to exist. It is a sublime and outrageous feedback loop, the process and product of which have never been as clearly and deeply represented as in this luminous book.
The inner cover photo of a box of matches full of dust and containing not only matches but burnt stubs, cotter pins and a spring, is one of the most complete and lovely images of the spirit of these brave artists I have ever seen. If you can understand that photo you can probably understand the process of making art out there.
Leo Nash certainly does understand the process. By far the most revealing collection of Burning Man photos ever compiled, as close to a portait of the thing as you are likely to see.
good photos deep in drivel October 12, 2007 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
I bought the book because I like black and white photos and because my son has attended Burning Man and worked for the corporation that creates the event in 2003. My intention is to give him the book; but, I decided to read the text before sending it off. The intro is long winded drivel (and at the time of this writing, the writer of the introduction has wasted valuable real estate on this product page with some self serving crap from his blog; who wants to wade down the page to get to the real reviews?) and the text by the photog is self indulgent in the style of the "burners." The notion that this event is somehow "spontaneous" is what really makes me laugh. A more apt description would be something on the order of "this is my personal journal and musings on this ongoing "spontaneous" event, plus some photos" The pictures are well made, and the presentation with a slipcover is nicely done, which is what rescues the book.
Picstures Worth Crying For August 2, 2007 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
I just received this book as a gift. I immediatley sat down and slowly turned each page in amazement of what he has captured. I cried.
I'm So Buying This Book June 29, 2007 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
This is seriously one of the coolest books I've ever seen in my life. I've never been to Burning Man (wouldn't want to), but these pictures are AMAZING. It might have been worth enduring desert discomfort dust storms and camping just to see the 2996 "Uchronia" structure-- wow.
An extraordinary view of an indescribable place May 14, 2007 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
Nash is a great photographer, with a clear, timeless vision that you can literally feel. His photographs hold you and keep you looking into them, farther. This is another volume in the work of our best contemporary photographers, and an extraordinary record of art and a place we might never have otherwise seen.
Burning Man is often described as being indescribable, and for good reason. So much of the art created there is ephemeral, lasting just a few days before burning to the ground. An entire city of 30,000 rises, falls, and disappears. To some, it feels like a heartbeat, and to others, a lifetime. To describe it in words is nearly impossible, when so much quickly becomes the elusive memory of memories.
Through Nash's remarkable photographs, we see a decade of visionary work and creativity that physically existed for only a moment. Whether you've been to Burning Man or not, this book will fill you with awe, and longing for the place.
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