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Drama in the Desert (2002) Online

Drama in the Desert (2002) Online
Original Title :
Drama in the Desert
Genre :
Creative Work / Documentary / History / Music
Year :
2002
Directror :
Jason Carswell,Justin Dossetti
Budget :
$250,000
Type :
Creative Work
Rating :
6.5/10
Drama in the Desert (2002) Online

"Drama In The Desert: The Sights And Sounds Of Burning Man" is a coffee table art book featuring Holly Kreuter's photography along with a DVD featuring her photos with additional video footage set to original music documenting the arts, festivities, life, and culture from 1995-2001 of the Burning Man annual one week event, set in the temporary autonomous Black Rock City, in Nevada's Black Rock Desert.

"Drama In The Desert: The Sights And Sounds Of Burning Man" is a coffee table art book featuring Holly Kreuter's photography along with a DVD featuring her photos with additional video footage set to original music documenting the arts, festivities, life, and culture of the Burning Man event set in the temporary autonomous Black Rock City, in Nevada's Black Rock Desert, for one week every year.

In addition to the book with DVD release, a separate CD "Music For Drama In The Desert" was published, composed by Sean Abreu containing the 12 tracks on the DVD.

Dave Eggers, famous author, wrote the foreword for "Drama In The Desert".

Chris Taylor, writer for Time Magazine and author of "How Star Wars Conquered the Universe: The Past, Present, and Future of a Multibillion Dollar Franchise", helped on the "Drama In The Desert" project.

M Dot, poet, helped on the "Drama In The Desert" project.

Michael Lazar, after working for Adobe and establishing his underwater cinematography, helped on the "Drama In The Desert" project by preparing all the DVD menu interfaces and preparing the multi-level DVD for publishing.

The "Drama In The Desert" book was printed in Singapore using brighter inks that had become illegal in the USA. When Holly and Lisa proofed the images in Singapore the printing factory lights were bright so the book, while great, is darker than intended and best viewed under brighter light.