Supply: fire art


I ran into Logan on Boston Common, where he was practicing rope dart with a small group. Rope dart is a length of rope with a small dart attached, or, in Logan's case, a fist-sized ball. You alternately wrap the rope around parts of your body -- your arms, legs, even your neck -- and twist around in order to launch it, often using the momentum already built up.
It's very uncommon in the U.S. Ultimately I want to find somebody to teach me. The reason I teach is to find somebody to surpass me.
The twist is that Logan does this as fire art, which is to say the fist-sized ball he is swinging around is, in performance, lit on fire.
He also does "contact fire", aka "fleshing", which means putting a thin strip of fuel across the skin and lighting it. Normally, Logan explained, you ignite the line and, at the end of the line, there's a torch of some sort waiting to be lit off of your body.
A lot of the appeal of fleshing is being naughty. Every performance I've seen has been very sensual.
I had to ask him about accidents; he told me about a time he was using the fire whip.
When you crack the whip, it literally shoots fireballs.
There was a time when one blew back on him, but, of course, he survived.
I've been on fire -- I know how to put myself out...The entire left half of my torso was on fire.
I had to ask, "Why fire art?" He says it's largely because of the performance aspect, and, of course, a touch of fascination with flame. Julia, another performer, added, "It's the adult version of pyromania that doesn't include burning things down."