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"And Sweet as Love" - a Mandala of
Peace and Passion
Ethno botanical installation executed for Eat Art 5, December 1st,
2002 in HEREArt Gallery, SoHo, New York City, USA. |
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"And Sweet as Love"
- a Mandala of Peace and Passion
And Sweet as Love - Mandala of Peace and Passion was an installation
executed for Eat Art 5, held on December 1st, 2002 at HEREArt
Gallery, SoHo New York City.
Dimensions can vary according to site, at HEREArt Gallery it
was 100 cm x 100 cm (ca. 45" x 45"), Materials: ground
coffee and refined commercial sugar. The installation - true
to its claim of being a mandala - was distroyed after the show.
I choose coffee and sugar as symbols for an European culture
that often quite ruthlessly destroyed foreign civilizations.
Coffee and sugar are both plants that the Europeans brought to
the Americas, for Central America's tropical garden Eden presented
ideal conditions for their cultivation. However, for the continent's
native American Indian inhabitants coffee and sugar meant enslavement
and the loss of homeland and culture.
So And Sweet as Love - Mandala of Peace and Passion pays respect
to the ancient continent of America and wants to be a memorial
for peaceful integration of different cultures. The form chosen
for the installation calls upon various associations such as
that of the international peace symbol; the image of "Turtle
Island" - the name the native American tribes called their
continent; and that of a very archaic drawing of the feminine
body, an image found by archeologists worldwide and thus connecting
all cultures.
"And Sweet as Love" - a Mandala of Peace and Passion
(exhibition text)
Coffee - black as hell, strong as death, and as sweet as love
(Turkish Proverb)
Coffee Discovered as early as 800 A.D. in the Ethiopian highlands,
cultivation and trade of coffee did not begin until the 15th
and early 16th centuries on the Arabian peninsula, especially
Yemen, Egypt, Syria and Turkey. The Arabians eagerly guarded
and protected their increasingly valuable plant and as late as
the 1900's having fertile coffee beans for export was considered
a crime in most coffee growing countries. Today it is the world's
most popular beverage after water, a world commodity second only
to oil.
Coffee has always stirred much controversy. While the Ethiopian
monks considered it as a gift from God - it allowed them to study
and pray longer - Italian clergy labeled it an invention of Satan
and condemned coffee during the 17th century. (It was probably
coffee's proven effect of increasing mental and intellectual
activity what made it suspicious to rulers and religious leaders.)
However, this label was forever lifted when Pope Clement VII
tried the beverage for himself, liked it and gave it his approval.
"Coffee is the beverage of choice for the journalist
or writer... By drinking coffee, logical consistency, consecutive
thinking derived from facts, is promoted by physical means,
and it can be said that even though for health reasons there
may be doubts about drinking much coffee, yet for those who
wish to ascend to the higher regions of spiritual life, it
is not amiss."
(Rudolf Steiner, Nutrition and Stimulants)
Sugar - civilization's kiss of death
It is thought that cane sugar was first used in Polynesia from
where it spread to India. Persia, and North Africa. Columbus'
discovery of the Americas made the Europeans independent from
expensive imports of the pleasant "white gold". Some
people consider cheap sugar the (American) "Indians' Revenge" for
stealing their entire continent: Today, refined sugar is considered
the main cause of most modern diseases.
"Sugar is the substance which inwardly supports us...
and gives self-awareness and... a very strong and definite
personality indicating a strong Ego. In countries where, statistically,
little sugar is eaten, the people have a less defined personality
than in countries where more sugar is eaten."
(Rudolf Steiner, Nutrition and Stimulants)
Mandala
Mandalas (Sanskrit for circle) are an ancient (art) form of
Tibetan Buddhism. Classically mandalas are drawings in three
dimensional forms most commonly created of colored sand, powdered
flowers, herbs or grains, and also powdered and colored stone.
When finished, to symbolize the impermanence of all that exists,
the sands are swept up and poured into a nearby river or stream
where the waters carry healing energies throughout the world.
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