Burning Man festival organisers have joined forces with the auction house Sotheby's to sell off sculptures, paintings, collectibles, NFTs and mutant vehicles
The "Ascension" (2021) NFT by Peter Ruprecht goes under the hammer as part of the "Boundless Space... The Possibilities of Burning Man" auction.
Image: Courtesy of Sotheby's
It's been two years since the flames went out at Burning Man. Faced with these successive cancellations, the American festival's organizers have joined forces with the auction house Sotheby's to sell off sculptures, paintings, collectibles, NFTs and mutant vehicles, as a way to ensure the survival of the artistic gathering.
For over 30 years, tens of thousands of people have flocked to the Black Rock Desert in Nevada for a week to build a temporary city. While this internationally renowned creative gathering was one of the many victims of the pandemic, its organizers hope to keep its spirit alive with the help of Sotheby's.
In September, the two institutions launched "Boundless Space... The Possibilities of Burning Man," an initiative that includes seminars, an art exhibition at Sotheby's New York galleries, and an online auction. The auction includes more than 180 works created by 170 artists from Burning Man's global network. Among them are sculptures, avant-garde vehicles and the gigantic structures synonymous with Burning Man.
Until October 8, collectors and art lovers can try to acquire a Cadillac DeVille transformed into a futuristic racing car by the American artist David Best—estimated to fetch between $30,000 and $50,000—or a sculpture of a mechanical octopus by Duane Flatmo, estimated at $35,000 to $45,000.