Fire Arts Festival
Encyclopedia
Each July The Crucible arts education center
The Crucible (arts education center)
The Crucible is a nonprofit industrial arts school in Oakland, California. Established in Berkeley in 1999, the institute was moved to its present location in 2003.The mission of The Crucible is to foster a collaboration of Arts, Industry and Community...

 in Oakland, California
Oakland, California
Oakland is a major West Coast port city on San Francisco Bay in the U.S. state of California. It is the eighth-largest city in the state with a 2010 population of 390,724...

holds the Fire Arts Festival, which celebrates creativity through fire and light with a spectacular open-air exhibition of interactive fire art, performance and the largest collection of outdoor fire sculpture on the West Coast. The Fire Arts Festival is a major fundraising event, and proceeds benefit The Crucible’s arts education programs for youth and adults.

2000

The second was held on July 8, 2000, and celebrated The Crucible's relocation to a warehouse with an additional 16000 square feet (1,486.4 m²) for new programs, classes and performance spaces.

2004

July 7–11, 2004 was the fourth FA Festival, and the first to span more than one evening. Five days and nights were filled with awe-inspiring spectacles of fire and light at The Crucible's industrial arts facility and adjacent 100000 square feet (9,290.3 m²) outdoor Fire Arts Arena in West Oakland. The festival was a wealth of workshops, classes, lectures and stimulating demonstrations showcasing innovative and thrilling artistic mediums, culminating in three different nights of mind-blowing performances, sculptures and exhibits from the best fire and light artists on the West Coast.

2005

The fifth FA Festival was held on July 12–17, 2005. The Crucible’s 48000 square feet (4,459.3 m²) industrial arts facility and nearby 200000 square feet (18,580.6 m²) outdoor arena in West Oakland. A full program of arts and educational events throughout six days and four evenings included lectures, classes, artist talks and arts demonstrations. The highlight was the many fire performances and fire and light sculptures featured in the outdoor exhibition arena on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights.

2006

The sixth annual FA Festival was held July 9–12, 2006. Towering pillars of flame, cracking bolts of electricity, bodies dancing through fire – over 8,000 people experienced the four-day celebration of fire and light. Attendees came during the day to learn new skills at special Crucible workshops and classes, and then returned at night as the Fire Arts Arena lit up with fire performances, music and the works of innovative fire sculptors.

2007

The seventh annual FA Festival was held July 11–14, 2007. The festival showcased kinetic and fire art pieces, with over 30 installation artists contributing to the event’s success. Many of the kinetic fire sculptures, like the 168 feet (51.2 m) Serpent Mother, created by arts collective The Flaming Lotus Girls, which encouraged hands-on participation like controlling propane jets. Another interactive display, Dance Dance Immolation, by Interpretive Arson, challenged participants to match on-screen dance steps – with the penalty for a misstep being a blast of fire to the face (fortunately dancers were suited up in Nomex firefighter suits prior to testing their skills).

2007 was the first year that the Festival included a full-length feature presentation. The Fire Odyssey, an 11-act modernized interpretation of Homer’s epic poem, was performed each night of the festival. As part of their commitment to the West Oakland community, The Crucible provided 600 complimentary tickets to youth and adult members of its community, making good on their commitment to make art accessible to all.

2008

The eighth annual Festival, held on July 9–12, 2008, had 26 performance groups and over 30 art installations.

2009

The ninth annual Festival was held in a new location, on the former Oakland Army Base just north of Grand Avenue, with three times as much space as the old West Oakland site. It featured the world premiere of Dan Cantrell's The Rootabaga Opera, a narrative musical presentation inspired by the children’s stories of poet Carl Sandburg.
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