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First year: | 2003 | |
Location: | Bethel, Vermont United States |
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Month: | July | |
Most Recent Event | ||
Date of event: | June 30 to July 4, 2011 | |
Participants: | 600+ | |
Website: | http://fireflyartscollective.org | |
List of regional Burning Man events |
Firefly Arts Collective is a non-profit organization that facilitates the annual New England regional burner festival 'Firefly'. Firefly is a regional event inspired by the annual Burning Man festival in Nevada. Firefly is held in Vermont typically during July 4 weekend. Most of the organizers and participants come from the Boston metropolitan area and surrounding states including, but not limited to, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, and New York.
Firefly is a camping event that celebrates art for art's sake and espouses a gift economy where no vending, sales or barter are permitted. Visual and performance artists from all over the New England region and the East Coast create a temporary community for the weekend. Participants share a wide range of talents from sculpting, painting, music, theatre, and DJing, to alternative forms of expression such as games, performance art, and circus talents such as aerial silks, juggling, and fire spinning.
The event adheres to the ten principles of the Burning Man event in Nevada. Among these are the Leave No Trace philosophy, an environmental policy whereby participants are obligated to remove every piece of refuse that they generate while at the event, taking it with them when they leave. The themes of radical self-expression and radical self-reliance are also borrowed from Burning Man. In addition, the event is considered a "no spectators" event, meaning that all attendees are expected to actively participate in its creation, staffing, and general philosophy.
According to the event's official website Firefly is, "A celebration of self-expression and community! Firefly is a participatory arts and music gathering in the woods of Vermont." The event is organized and run completely by volunteers. On the last night of Firefly a giant wooden Firefly is burned. In 2006 the Firefly included fireworks launched from its top.
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Firefly is held at the end of Vermont's mud and rain season. The road leading to the current event site is a dirt road that can become unnavigable by average vehicles due to mud. Firefly, like Burning Man, is not for the faint of heart. The event is not car camping, and the struggle to create a beautiful community in the middle of the woods is part of the magic that makes Firefly stand out from many other regional burns.
Firefly was started in 2003 by Boston burners. It was first held on NUHOC land in Shelburne, New Hampshire. In 2009 it took place at the Laurelin Retreat Center, home of neopagan writer Kirk White.[1]