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FoAM bxl as a lab for rituals
The third in a series of conversations about the transiency of FoAM bxl. This time we asked ourselves what if FoAM bxl would focus on rituals as a focus of our work in the coming years? The conversation has developed from the Macrotranisency of Barbara Raes, looking at a possible follow-up of her research into rituals related to death and dying, as a FoAM project or even a structurally funded lab.
Ritual
What do we associate with a ritual?
Connection, social cohesion, inclusion, enriching, giving, “Every man and woman is a star”
Peak experiences, contact with the supra-human, divination & invocation, rapture, conversion, honouring
Focusing of purpose, clarity
Tradition (een verhaal onderschrijven die uit een traditie komt)
Transition, transformation, change of status, giving meaning
Time marker, a moment to remember, life & death
Emotional conduit, tears and smiles, sharing emotion, energy, rapture, crunchy delirium
Energy, fire, smell of smoke, river water, rain drops, beauty, colours, dressed-up, decorated
Silence, space to breathe
FoAM
What do we associate with FoAM?
Grow your own worlds, bubbles (many), tangles, 'groeigrond', a temporary autonomous zone
Healthy environment, home, food, a place to be yourself, individual togetherness, generosity, responsibility
Total experience, a caress for the senses
Taste of brilliance, hidden treasures, supernatural, deadly mushroom ballet
Interstices, open ended (processes, effects…), unfinished experiments
Silence in the storm, motionless fireworks, space to think, do, breathe, meet…
Playful, nuclear proactor, childish adults, swings, characters, voodoo quaker bellydance, ping-pong
Constant flux, polyrhythmic, different rhythms
Sustainable environment, green, green, green
Saving the world, scale vs scope, perpendicular heavenly instruction
FoAM & Rituals
What lives in the cross-section between FoAM and rituals?
Most things mentioned above can be relevant for both FoAM and rituals, so we realised that we can just draw a larger circle around the two, in which the characteristics of FoAM as a lab for rituals are already described. However, there are a few specific words that appeared in both discussions, which could be seen as a foundation of FoAM as a lab for rituals:
Celebration
Process
Participation, care
Alternatives, reframing, recodification
Aesthetics
Connections, “ontmoeting”
Transition and transformation
FoAM lab for rituals
What does it mean for you (FoAM members present at the conversation)?
Study and appreciation of the existing history and context of rituals. Understanding and uncovering rituals that are already out there, both rarified and non-rarified, including things that aren’t yet considered rituals and border on (unconscious) habits (e.g. employment, dress-codes, greetings, negotiations, etc.). Learning about the structures, codes and formalisms of traditional rituals
Participaning in out-of-the-ordinary experiences; partaking in non-conceptual, pre-linguistic Dionisian celebrations
Developing our culture of hosting and hospitality, food and drinks in the framework of rituals
Becoming a place where magic happens and lives are changing
Being a garage for rituals (construction, repair, maintenance…), custom made rituals that are unique but grounded in tradition (for individuals and communities)
Moments of deep seriousness punctuated with moments of silliness and humour
Developing FoAM’s specific aesthetics
Connecting to people from very divergent fields (e.g. artists, technologists, druids, anthropologists…) and creating unholy alliances
Working with rituals in a secular context and working with appropriate technologies (e.g mobile phones aka tracking devices) to connect rituals to the contemporary zeitgeist - e.g. geomancy using GPS signals
Rituals related to our relationship to the future - contemporary invocation and divination practices
Method of science, aim of religion finding FoAM’s place in relation to the the post-enlightenment pantheism and occultism
Becoming aware of our own cultural traditions and contemporary realities in which we live (e.g. we can’t escape being embedded in neo-liberal societies)
Collecting existing rituals around the world
Developing a fieldguide for ritual techniques, flows, processes and methods
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Connecting the world outside to the 'hidden treasures' in FoAM
Engaging in 'soul midwifery' - deep listening in dying and other transformational processes
Finding a multifaceted language and different ways to talk about rituals in different contexts (e.g. young people, scientists, businesses, paliative care units, cultural critics, school children, etc.)
Conducting Learning journeys, immersive experiences and training expeditions in traditional communities (e.g. monasteries)
“To foam” could become a verb that needs no explanation
Be very careful and aware of unintentional branding as a ’sect’
What does it mean for the ritual as an art form, with a place in the art-world / art sector?
Participatory events of different durations, where the process and performance inform each other
Guided tours the gardens of Earthly Delights / Eden
A combination of music and architecture, sonic spaces
Direct experiences: singing, breathing, listening, dancing, sleep deprivation…
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Rediscovering (cultural/environmental) pilgrimage and old routes as an alternative to 'consumerist tourism’
Ritual architecture
Experience and event design: small everyday rituals and extraordinary total experiences
The art field can become a neutral space, an entry point to (re)introduce rituals (to atheists, good communicators, potential art donors, etc.) as participatory events. The danger is that if we frame rituals as art they might not be taken seriously.
Reframing and reclaiming art as part of (daily) life
Licensing requirements: ritual commons
Revaluing of collective, anonymous creations, acknowledgement of horizontal and vertical lineage (transdisciplinary and historical)
Artisanal ritualcraft
What does it mean for society and ’the world’?
Small, mundane, prozaic rituals AND non-ordinary peak experiences
Social cohesion, family in the broadest sense of the word
Life-changing experiences
Safe and supervised spaces for non-ordinary experiences and alternative states of consciousness (including a political and/or pragmatic approach to end prohibition of psychedelics (in rituals; possible collaboration with
MAPS)
Raising awareness of the need for secular rituals to fill the void left in the wake of grand (religious) narratives (see
Religion for Atheists); reclaiming and reframing christian rituals in secular contexts (e.g. baptism, communion, marriage, etc.)
Transdisciplinary and transgenerational, building bridges between cultures, creating space for next generations
Reframing traditions as well as creating rituals for situations in which they should exist but don’t exist yet (e.g. rituals for miscarried children)
Reframing what 'spirituality' might mean in a materialist society
Finding a more mutually beneficial relationship between humans and the rest of the world (ref. McKenna’s “Planetary Other”)
From a culture of fear to a culture of trust