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Burning Man s complicated relationship with the Black community
Chinwe Oniah
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A Que Viva camp member at the Burning Man event.Courtesy of Tony Edwards
On the final night of Burning Man 2020, in a virtual affair in what was called the Multiverse, Burning Man co-founder Crimson Rose took part in the ritual burning of a wooden sculpture of the Man. Activist and artist Favianna Rodriguez watched on at home: They were filming it and they lit up the Man. I was like, That era is over. That era of how they envision Burning Man is over.
Burning Man is seen by most as a hippie’s paradise that takes place in a man-made desert city called Black Rock City, but according to attendees, it’s much more than that, and you just have to be there to understand. Most will say it’s an indescribable, life-changing event that everyone should experience.
Bay Area museums reach beneath the surface for Black History Month
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Feb 02, 2021
If you ve taken a stroll down Fulton Street anytime since this past June, odds are you ve seen the bold yellow letters reading Black Lives Matter. A collaborative effort between the African American Art and Culture Complex and the Bay Area Mural Program, the community-made street art spans several blocks you can t miss it. The slogan for the Black Liberation Movement is everywhere lately. From T-shirts to email signatures, the once-radical phrase is now plastered on nearly every surface. As Black History Month is here, I find myself wondering, as cultural critic and author of