Due to the coronavirus pandemic, Burning Man took a two-year break. Now it’s back in all its costumed, group glory. The annual festival, which lasts for a whole week and takes place in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, kicked off on Sunday with the theme Waking Dreams.
For the festival, which honors independence and expression, some 80,000 campers have traveled to the makeshift Black Rock City.
All of the attractions in the transient city are designed and constructed by participants, who also plan all of the activities and events.
The event showcases a wide variety of artistic creations, including performances and built structures. It is named for the substantial effigy known as The Man, which is burned on the festival’s penultimate night. The event concludes this year on September 5.
Burning Man first took place in San Francisco in 1986 before being relocated to Black Rock Desert in 1991. In 2020 and 2018, the 36-year-old event was postponed, and burning sessions and virtual events were organized in its place.
Participants in the festival, who pay $575 for a ticket, may anticipate enjoying parties with music ranging from jazz and Latin to disco and 1980s pop. In addition, there will be meditation and hypnotherapy sessions, and there will be a hammock forest where people may unwind.
The Burning Man Project, which also organizes smaller versions of the festival throughout the US and other countries, is in charge of planning it. Additionally, it leads neighborhood projects like Burners Without Borders, Black Rock Solar, and Global Art Grants, all of which were established to advance the anti-consumerism and self-expression tenets of Burning Man.