OregonRed wrote: Too late. You've belittled my art and my contribution.
Respectfully, not your art and contribution.. only the sense of entitlement.
Hugs.
OregonRed wrote: Too late. You've belittled my art and my contribution.
Savannah wrote:It sounds freaky & wrong, so you need to do it.
OregonRed wrote:We are treated no differently than any of the other BMORG sponsored art project...
...Maybe you don't understand why the BMORG would be willing to offer reduced price/gift tickets to fire conclaves at Burning Man but, whether or not you understand it, they do.
"If someone already likes your [art], how hard you worked doesn't matter. If they don't, telling them how hard you worked is not going to change their mind."-ctein
How? How does more fire take away from the experience of burning something?theCryptofishist wrote:frustration about the fire conclave is that for most participants it doesn't add anything to the value of the man burn, in fact, it subtracts from it.
Art Grants? Honorarium tickets? Change performer to artist, or vice versa, and bear in mind that fire spinning is performance art.trilobyte wrote:I think there will always be divided opinion on the issue - after all, no other performers are given assistance or comped tickets
*Mind you, the OP of this thread had a bad case of that going on....I wrote:OregonRed & I make clear each year with the Oregon Fire Conclave that if you are joining for the sole purpose of getting a discount ticket, you're doing it wrong. We start rehearsals in January, we accept all levels of spinners, and we work everyones ass off. And, we make it clear that all the work is about the fire, not the ticket.
The discounted ticket is a gift. Not a right. Not a privilege. Not something one is entitled to get. I personally am grateful for it, but I never expect it. It's a bonus.
lets just round it all out and say roughly 10% of Registered art projects get LLC funding and support"In 2010, there were over 275 registered art projects on the open playa – an increase from 2009 by a couple of dozen. Of these, 36 were honoraria projects" http://afterburn.burningman.com/10/art/artofbrc.html
"2010 was a very good year for art and the Art Department. Over 240 art projects preregistered by July 1st, and over 50 registered on playa."
http://afterburn.burningman.com/10/art/process.html
It reminds me of my county fair, where they have the free rodeo we get to watch. The climax performance is the bull riding at the end, but to get to that point you have to sit and watch stuff like these girls on horses racing around barrels and other stuff that kind of just "goes along for the ride." It's not to say there aren't people who enjoy watching those parts of the rodeo, or that they're done poorly, but many people--especially people who have already watched the rodeo before--would rather just cut to the chase.The CO wrote:How? How does more fire take away from the experience of burning something?theCryptofishist wrote:frustration about the fire conclave is that for most participants it doesn't add anything to the value of the man burn, in fact, it subtracts from it.
Waiting for the man to burn, not being able to see past the people in front of you.... All these things would happen even if there was no conclave.