View of the people walking around Temple in the day on a hill with Derry~Londonderry visible in the background
Temple, David Best, 2015. Produced by Artichoke in Derry~Londonderry. Photo by Matthew Andrews

Built to burn; designed to heal

A Radical Arts Project in Derry~Londonderry

In March 2015, Artichoke brought Burning Man artist David Best to the city.  Together with people from across the community a beautiful shared structure was built that measured 72ft high before it was ceremonially burnt.  

Temple turned traditional associations with bonfire burning in Northern Ireland on their head

Bonfires have long been a part of Northern Ireland’s history. To some they are a time-honoured tradition, to others they create tension and division.

Artist David Best has a reputation for constructing huge, soaring temple structures at Burning Man in the Nevada Desert. Built with his volunteer Temple Crew, the structures have become a place for remembrance, their ritual burning an opportunity to let go of painful memories.

Artichoke planned to bring David to Derry~Londonderry to build a shared structure that would enable the local community to let go of the past and look to the future.

Over two years, we worked to realise the project. A Kickstarter campaign raised over £30,000 in 40 days. Finally, David arrived in early 2015 with his Temple Crew to begin work.

Joining 40 local unemployed volunteers, the team battled through rain, snow and high winds to build the 72ft high structure. Its timber frame was clad with intricate panels, some of which had been designed and cut by young people in the Nerve Centre’s Fablab.

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75,000

Audience members

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£30,000

Raised through Kickstarter

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1,157

Local participants, including 40 youth apprentices

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40

Volunteer Temple Guardians

Temple structure lifted by a crane
Top of temple in the day on a hill with Derry~Londonderry visible in the background

Artist

Artist, David Best standing in front of the Temple construction site.
Artist Profile

David Best

Born California, USA, 1945

David Best is an internationally acclaimed American sculptor. He originally trained in sculpture at the San Francisco Institute of Art and his practice includes sculpture and collage using found objects such as the skeletons of old cars and recycled wood.

He is best known for his extraordinary, cathartic temples ritually sent up in flames as part of Nevada’s annual Burning Man festival. Made from recycled wood, Best’s soaring Temple structures are built with the help of hundreds of volunteers. His Temples have taken on a spiritual significance as spaces for remembrance and forgiving and are ritually burnt to the ground at the end of Burning Man, along with personal messages, mementos and offerings left inside by participants.

In 2015 Artichoke worked with Best in Derry~Londonderry, Northern Ireland to produce Temple, a temporary public artwork to encourage the local community to let go of the past and look to the future. Best then went on to collaborate with Artichoke in 2022, on the second anniversary of the COVID pandemic, to build Sanctuary, another temporary commemorative public artwork in Nuneaton & Bedworth.

 

Website Link

Temple Stories

To document Temple, 20 volunteers working on the build were given video cameras. Under the direction of award winning filmmaker Margo Harkin and her team, the resulting series of films and documentary offer a unique insight into the process.

Temple belonged to everyone

Temple belonged to everyone: from the donors around the world who supported the project to the many people across Derry~Londonderry who helped build the structure and every single person who came to see it.

Up to 60,000 people visited over the seven days it was open, covering the inside of the structure and its central pillar with personal messages. They included a delegation from the Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace, founded by families of victims of the 1993 IRA bomb attack in Warrington, and the family of PSNI Constable Philippa Reynolds, who was killed in 2013 when a stolen 4×4 vehicle crashed into her police car in Derry, as well as many family members from all sides of the ‘Troubles’.

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21

Members of Californian Temple Crew

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98

Local volunteers

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20

Temple Stories Participants

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4

Local carpenters

TempleCraft: a digital Temple made in Minecraft

Templecraft was an innovative digital arts project inspired by a monumental real –world construction.

TempleCraft - The Minecraft Replica

TempleCraft: a digital Temple made in Minecraft
Templecraft, BlockWorks, part of Temple, David Best, 2015. Produced by Artichoke in Derry~Londonderry.

Using Minecraft, artist Adam Clarke, BlockWorks and Sparks built a digital reconstruction of David Best’s Temple, replicating its startling architecture and intricate internal spaces.

Mapped onto a representation of the city of Derry~Londonderry, this extraordinary digital artwork created the impression of a ‘Temple’ high on a hill, towering over the city below. Minecraft players were then invited to explore the structure online, and leave their own messages, mementos or objects inside its walls, before it too was ceremonially ‘burned’ online on Saturday 21st March. Nothing was left behind.

This was an opportunity for the world-wide Minecraft community to experience and participate in a major temporary art work, and for new users of the software to explore a beautiful digital landscape.

Commissioned by Artichoke and The Space in collaboration with CultureTECH.

The Burn

On Saturday 21st March the structure was ceremonially set alight by eight individuals Best had got to know over the course of the build: Tony Doherty, Rossa O’Dochartaigh, Michelle McClaren, Paula Higgins and her son, Emma Diven, Bronah Mclaughlin and Kevin Strathern. 15,000 people watched Temple burn, as the hopes and dreams of thousands drifted into the sky.

People inside the temple structure looking around

It wasn’t just the building process. Simply visiting the temple – setting foot in a part of town that has long felt off limits because of its political and religious affiliations – was significant for many.

~ Jo Caird, Spears Magazine ~

Peace Camp

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