The One Tree
by Dan Das Mann

Dan Das Mann, The One Tree,recycled copper pipe, fire, 1998.
(© Dan Das Mann. Photo: Gabe Kirchheimer)



The One Treerecycled copper pipe, water, 1998.
(© Dan Das Mann. Photo: Gabe Kirchheimer)


The One Treewas the pinnacle of my dream to recreate the first commissioned artwork of my career, done five years earlier, as a life-size monumental work. I built the piece as an exploration of an aspect of my philosophy, which is based on the development of organic plant-based themes as functioning interactive objects and as a gift to the people who are part of a family that changed me forever. The sculpture was essentially a 25-foot tall oak tree built entirely of recycled copper pipe. Functioning as a fire and water fountain, it was placed in a central location of the 1998 Burning Man event, the Keyhole, the entrance to the promenade that led straight to the Burning Man sculpture. The One Treesat above a 3000 gallon pool of water covered by a wooden grate so that participants could stand beneath the falling water by day and dance by evening around its firelit branches. The One Treebecame a sort of social watering hole and gathering place where people could cool off, read a book, or socialize.

The One Treeused a large solar-powered pump to recirculate water. Hundreds of revelers would gather under the cooling water as it dripped from the branches while many more lay beneath it. People approached me and told me of the powerful emotions they felt as they contemplated the meaning of the piece. Each person seemed to have such a different response. I quickly learned that an art piece of this scale was truly the result of much more than its physical composition. Instead, it was the group experience that actually made the work exist. More than once I saw someone actually crying while they gazed upon the scene.

At night The One Treetook on a totally different aesthetic as its branches sprouted fire, a signaling torch to gather people for its warmth and emotional comfort. To create its flames, I used propane fuel pumped through the branches resulting in nine 12 inch fires throughout the structure. Each night I attached 3 twenty-five gallon propane tanks and let them run out. I had two sets of tanks and would refill the spare set each day. The fuel usually lasted for 12 hours, until the early morning on the following day. Those who experienced the tree seemed deeply touched by this piece. Strangely, I never really thought it would cause such a vast emotional response. I just wanted to build it and magically, people came.

In the end, The One Treewas destroyed by a storm two weeks after the event. I felt a certain sense of completion. The piece was built in Black Rock City , a temporal experience. Similarly, so is the art we build for it. In truth, our memories and achievements are the important mementos we bring home from our time in the Black Rock Desert. The One Treewill live on for many as part of a permanent change in their philosophical and material life experience. This is why I make art.

Dan Das Mann
710 Innes Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94124
U.S.A.
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       | Burning Man |
				       
				   | gallery entrance |

		            | past exhibitions |

				            | Leonardo On-Line |