Local artist asks for help with 30-foot tall fire-breathing gnome sculpture

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WGGB/WSHM) - A Hampshire County artist is going big at one of the world’s most famous art festivals with a sculpture like never before and he’s looking for your help to make it happen.
Ezra Livingston wants to build a 30-foot tall wooden garden gnome with pyrotechnics shooting flames out of its hat and mouth.
He’s planning to bring it to the Burning Man Festival in Nevada pending final design approval.
“It feels like you’re on another planet, it’s a harsh environment, there’s a lot of challenges, and you are working with a community, which is really, really wonderful,” Livingston said.
A 1999 graduate of UMass Amherst, he has made a career out of making murals, building treehouses, and other art projects.
He first went to Burning Man as a spectator in 2014 and 2015 and has since has at least one installation at the event beginning in 2016, from La Victrola to Shrine of the Macabre to Andas the Turtle.
This year, he and his team will be working on his biggest project yet.
“My girlfriend’s mom, she gave us these little gnomes. And I was like ‘this is really cool.’ I think a gnome is just a wonderful, mythical creature,” he said.
Teammates are working on part of the project on the West Coast while Livingston waits to get to work on the gnome at family properties in Shelburne Falls and Easthampton.
The installation recently became one of 75 to receive a $16,000 honorarium grant that would be used to help transport what is built, but Livingston says more assistance is needed.
“I’m looking for wood, some pine cladding, things like that,” he said. “We are also looking for makers, builders, {and} doers.”
Livingston says the project carries a bigger message.
“We need more creativity to celebrate life and human existence, and I think this is a big part of it,” he said.
Livingston is expected to start construction on June 10. You can click here if you’re interested in volunteering or donating to the project.
Copyright 2026 Western Mass News (WGGB/WSHM). All rights reserved.
Read the Original Article
This article was originally published by Western Mass News. Click below to read the full article on their website.
Visit Western Mass News
