Public Project
For One Weekend a Year, a Tiny Town on the Salton Sea Becomes a Mecca for Artists and Partiers
Early one morning, a crowd of people makes its way onto Bombay Beach for a sunrise performance by Iranian-born opera singer, Ariana Vafadari. Set against the post-apocalyptic landscape, Vafadari’s performance before a bleary-eyed audience is the sort of otherworldly moment the Bombay Beach Biennale has become known for.
Founded in 2015 by Lily Johnson White, Tao Ruspoli and Stefan Ashkenazy, the Bombay Beach Biennale is an immersive celebration of art, music, and philosophy that takes place over a weekend each year on the shores of the Salton Sea. Exactly when it will take place is always a mystery (this year it was March 22-24). Organizers don’t advertise it and they don’t sell tickets. No money changes hands. It’s art for art’s sake, and an effort to revive a broken town.
In the 1950s and ’60s, Bombay Beach was a thriving holiday destination. Guests (including the Beach Boys and Frank Sinatra) swam and water-skied in the sea during the day, then partied at the yacht club into the night. Today, Bombay Beach looks more like a scene out of Mad Max, and is home to a population of just 250 residents.
While the Biennale only lasts a few days, it aims to leave a lasting mark on the local community and revitalize the town by turning it into a year-round destination for art. But for those who manage to hear about it in time to make the scene, the event itself, the art, the imagery, the people, the light, the music, the juxtaposition of world class art set on the shores of an endangered lake (California’s largest), is unforgettable.
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