Theater of Mysteries
Monday, November 5, 2012
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Eurythmy
Eurythmy
Eurythmy is an expressive movement art originated
by Rudolf Steiner in conjunction with Marie von Sivers in the early 20th
century. Primarily a performance art, it is also used in education,
especially in Waldorf schools, and as a movement therapy.
The word eurythmy stems from Greek roots
meaning beautiful or harmonious rhythm; the term was used by Greek
and Roman architects to refer to the harmonious proportions of a design or
building.
Movement
repertoire
The gestures in
the eurythmist's movement repertoire relate to the sounds and rhythms of
speech, to the tones and rhythms of music and to soul experiences, such as joy
and sorrow. Once these fundamental repertoire elements are learned, they can be
composed into free artistic expressions. The eurythmist also cultivates a
feeling for the qualities of straight lines and curves, the directions of
movement in space (forward, backward, up, down, left, right), contraction and
expansion, and color. The element of color is also emphasized both through the
costuming, usually given characteristic colors for a piece or part and formed
of long, loose fabrics that accentuate the movements rather than the bodily
form, and through the lighting, which saturates the space and changes with the
moods of the piece.
Eurythmy's aim is to bring the artists' expressive
movement and both the performers' and audience's feeling experience into
harmony with a piece's content; eurythmy is thus sometimes called
"visible music" or "visible speech", expressions that
originate with its founder, Rudolf
Steiner, who described eurythmy as an "art of the soul".
Most eurythmy today is performed to classical (concert) music or texts
such as poetry or
stories. Silent pieces are also sometimes performed.
Eurythmy
with music
When performing eurythmy with music (also called tone
eurythmy), the three major elements of music, melody, harmony and rhythm, are all
expressed.The
melody is primarily conveyed through expressing its rise and fall; the specific pitches;
and the intervallic qualities present. Harmony is
expressed through movement between tension and release, as expressions of
dissonance and consonance, and between the more inwardly directed minor mood and
the outwardly directed major mood. Rhythm is chiefly conveyed through livelier
and more contoured movements for quick notes, slower, dreamier movements for
longer notes; in addition, longer tones move into the more passive (listening)
back space, quicker tones into the more active front space.
Breaths or pauses are expressed through a larger or
smaller movement in space, giving new impulse to what follows. Beat is conveyed
through greater emphasis of downbeats, or those beats upon which stress is
normally placed. Beat is generally treated as a subsidiary element. Eurythmy
has only occasionally been done to popular music, in which beat plays a large
role.
The timbre of individual instruments is brought into
the quality both of the tonal gestures and of the whole movement of the
eurythmist. Usually there will be a different eurythmist or group of
eurythmists expressing each instrument, for example in chamber or symphonic
music.
A piece's choreography usually
expresses elements such as the major or minor key, the shape of the melody
line, the interplay between voices or instruments and the relative dominance of
one or another voice or instrument. Thus, musicians can often follow even the
finest details of their part in the movements of the eurythmists on stage.
Particular musical forms (e.g. the sonata) can
have special characteristic choreographic expressions.
Eurythmy
with spoken texts
Eurythmy is often performed with spoken texts such
as poetry, stories or plays. Speech eurythmy includes such elements
as the sounds of
speech, rhythms, poetic meters,grammar and
mood. In speech eurythmy, all the sounds of language have characteristic
gestural qualities: the sound of an 'Ah' is formed by raising your arms over
your head in a v-shape, designed to show the open quality of that sound. An
'n', however, uses a sharper, jerking movement (as if touching something hot
and then jerking your hands up), again complementing the sound of the letter.
Note that it is the audible sounds themselves, not the letters of the written
language, that are expressed.
History
Eurythmy was born in 1911 when a widow brought her
young daughter, Lory Smits, who was interested in movement and dance, to the Austrian philosopher Rudolf
Steiner. Due to the recent loss of her father, it was necessary for
the girl to find a career. Steiner's advice was sought; he suggested that the
girl begin working on a new art of movement. As preparation for this, she began
to study human anatomy, to explore the human step, to contemplate the movement
implicit in Greek sculpture and dance, and to find movements that would express
spoken sentences using the sounds of speech. Soon a number of other young
people became interested in this form of expressive movement.
During these years, Steiner was writing a new drama
each year for performance at the Anthroposophical Society's summer
gatherings; beginning in 1912, he began to incorporate the new art of movement
into these dramas. When the Society decided to build an artistic center in Dornach, Switzerland (this
later became known as the Goetheanum) a small stage group began work and offered weekly
performances of the developing art. Marie Steiner-von Sivers, Steiner's wife,
who was a trained actress and speech artist, was given responsibility for
training and directing this ensemble. This first eurythmy ensemble went on tour
in 1919, performing across Switzerland,
the Netherlands and Germany.
Steiner saw eurythmy as a unique expression of the anthroposophical impulse:
It is the task of Anthroposophy to bring a greater
depth, a wider vision and a more living spirit into the other forms of art. But
the art of Eurythmy could only grow up out of the soul of Anthroposophy; could
only receive its inspiration through a purely Anthroposophical conception.
—Rudolf Steiner
In 1924, Steiner gave two intensive workshops on
different aspects of eurythmy; transcripts of his talks during these workshops
are published as Eurythmy as Visible Speech andEurythmy as Visible
Singing.
Eurythmy ensembles in Stuttgart, Germany and
at the Goetheanum soon became established parts of the cultural life of Europe.
The Goetheanum ensemble was recognized with a gold medal at the Paris Expo of
1937/8. The Stuttgart training and ensemble, led by Else Klink, had to close in
the Nazi period
but reopened shortly after the close of World War II.
There are now training centers and artistic ensembles in many countries.
Eurythmy
as a performing art
There are notable eurythmy ensembles in Dornach, Switzerland; Stuttgart, Germany; The Hague, Netherlands; London, England; Järna, Sweden, and Chestnut Ridge, New York(near New York City).
All of these groups both perform locally and tour internationally. Many smaller
performing groups also exist (see list). High schools
that have their own performing ensembles include the San Francisco
Waldorf High School ensemble.
Pedagogical
eurythmy
When the first Waldorf
School was founded in 1919, Eurythmy was included in the
curriculum.It
was quickly recognized as a successful complement to gymnastics in
the school's movement program and is now taught in most Waldorf schools, as
well as in many non-Waldorf pre-school centers, kindergartens and schools. It
is taught to all ages from pre-schools through high school and into college.
Its purpose is to awaken and strengthen the expressive capacities of children
through movement, stimulating the child to bringimagination, ideation and conceptualization to
the point where they can manifest these as "vital, moving forms" in
physical space.
Eurythmy pedagogical exercises begin with the
straight line and curve and proceed through successively more complicated
geometric figures and choreographed forms, developing a child's coordination
and concentration. An extensive set of special exercises has also been
developed for pedagogical purposes.These
include metamorphosing geometric patterns and dynamic movement sequences.
Rods or balls are sometimes used in exercises to
develop precision in movement, to expand the experience of space, and to
objectify the movement experience. The rods are usually approximately the
length of an arm; the balls are of a size to fit comfortably in one hand. Both
are generally made of copper, a material receptive to warmth. Various
therapeutic exercises also employ these.
Though there are some independent post-graduate
trainings for pedagogical eurythmy, this aspect is frequently included in
courses focusing on artistic work.
Therapeutic
eurythmy
Eurythmy is used therapeutically, normally on the
advice of a physician, to compensate for somatic or psychological imbalances;
the aim is to strengthen the organism'ssalutogenic capacity
to heal itself. Case
studies suggest that therapeutic eurythmy may be helpful for children with attention-deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD).
There are post-graduate trainings in the therapeutic
use of eurythmy.
Socially
therapeutic uses of eurythmy
Eurythmy has also been used in many social contexts,
including workplaces and prisons, with the aim of rejuvenating individuals and
their social relationships.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Osho Rajneesh: Whirling Meditation Technique
Osho
discourse on Whirling Meditation Technique
Osho: The first meditation, which you will be
doing in the morning, is related to the rising sun. It is a morning meditation.
When the sleep is broken the whole of nature becomes alive. The night has gone,
the darkness is no more, the sun is coming up, and everything becomes conscious
and alert. So this first meditation is a meditation in which you have to be
continuously alert, conscious, aware, whatsoever you do. The first step,
breathing; the second step, catharsis; the third step, the mantra, the
mahamantra: HOO.
Remain a witness. Don't get lost. It is easy to get lost. While you are breathing you can forget; you can become one with the breathing so much that you can forget the witness. But then you miss the point. Breathe as fast, as deep as possible, bring your total energy to it, but still remain a witness. Observe what is happening as if you are just a spectator, as if the whole thing is happening to somebody else, as if the whole thing is happening in the body and the consciousness is just centered and looking. This witnessing has to be carried in all the three steps. And when everything stops- and in the fourth step you have become completely inactive, frozen-then this alertness will come to its peak.
In the afternoon meditation -- kirtan, dancing,
singing -- another inner work has to be done. In the morning you have to be
fully conscious; in the afternoon meditation you have to be half conscious,
half unconscious. It is a noontide meditation -- when you are alert, but you
feel sleepy. It is just like a man who is under the influence of some
intoxicant. He walks, but cannot walk rightly; he knows where he is going, but
everything is dim. He is conscious and not conscious.
He knows he has taken alcohol, he knows his feet are
wavering, but he knows this half-asleep, half-awake. So in the afternoon
meditation remember this -- act as if you are intoxicated, drunk, ecstatic.
Sometimes you will forget yourself completely like a drunkard, sometimes you
will remember, but don't try to be conscious just like the morning, no. Move
with the day -- half-half in the noon. Then you are in tune with nature.
In the night, just the opposite of the morning -- be completely unconscious; don't bother at all. The night has come, the sun has set, now everything is moving into unconsciousness. Move into unconsciousness.
In the night, just the opposite of the morning -- be completely unconscious; don't bother at all. The night has come, the sun has set, now everything is moving into unconsciousness. Move into unconsciousness.
This whirling, Sufi whirling, is one of the most
ancient techniques, one of the most forceful. It is so deep that even a
single experience can make you totally different. You have to whirl with open
eyes, just like small children go on twirling, as if your inner being has
become a center and your whole body has become like a wheel, moving- a potter's
wheel, moving. You are in the center, but the whole body is moving.
Start slowly, clockwise. If somebody feels it is very
difficult to move clockwise then anti-clockwise, but the rule is to move
clockwise. If a few people are left-handed then they may feel it difficult;
they can move anti-clockwise. And almost ten percent of people are left-handed,
so if you find that clockwise you feel uneasy, move anti-clockwise; but start
with clockwise, then feel. Music will be there, slow, just to help you. In the
beginning move very slowly; don't go fast, but very slowly, enjoying.
And then, by and by, go faster. The first fifteen
minutes, go slowly; the second fifteen minutes, fast; the third fifteen
minutes, faster; the fourth fifteen minutes, just completely mad. And then your
total energy, you, become a whirlpool, an energy whirlpool, lost completely in
it: no witnessing, no effort to observe. Don't try to see; be the whirlpool, be
the whirling. One hour.
In the beginning you may not be able to stand so long, but remember one thing, don't stop by yourself, don't stop the whirling. If you feel it is impossible the body will fall down automatically, but don't you stop. If you fall down in the middle of the hour there is no problem; the process is complete. But don't play tricks with yourself, don't deceive; don't think that now you are tired so it is better to stop.
In the beginning you may not be able to stand so long, but remember one thing, don't stop by yourself, don't stop the whirling. If you feel it is impossible the body will fall down automatically, but don't you stop. If you fall down in the middle of the hour there is no problem; the process is complete. But don't play tricks with yourself, don't deceive; don't think that now you are tired so it is better to stop.
No, don't make it a decision on your part. If you
are tired, how can you go on? You will fall automatically. So don't stop
yourself; let the whirling itself come to a point where you fall down. When you
fall down, fall down on your stomach; and it will be good if your stomach is in
direct touch with the earth. Then close the eyes. Lie down on the earth as if
lying down on the breast of your mother, a small child lying down on the breast
of the mother. Become completely unconscious. And this whirling will help.
Whirling gives intoxication to the body. It is a chemical thing, it gives you intoxication, to be exact. That's why sometimes you may feel giddy just like a drunkard. What is happening to the drunkard? Hidden behind your ears is a sixth sense, the sense of balance. When you take any drink, any alcoholic thing, any intoxicating drug, it goes directly to the center of balance in the ear and disturbs it. That's why a drunkard cannot walk, feels dizzy. The same happens in whirling.
Whirling gives intoxication to the body. It is a chemical thing, it gives you intoxication, to be exact. That's why sometimes you may feel giddy just like a drunkard. What is happening to the drunkard? Hidden behind your ears is a sixth sense, the sense of balance. When you take any drink, any alcoholic thing, any intoxicating drug, it goes directly to the center of balance in the ear and disturbs it. That's why a drunkard cannot walk, feels dizzy. The same happens in whirling.
If you whirl, really, the effect will be the same:
you will feel intoxicated, drunk. But enjoy this drunkenness is worth
something. This being in a drunken state is what Sufis have been calling
ecstasy, masti. In the beginning you may feel giddy, in the beginning sometimes
you may feel nausea, but within two, three days, these feelings will disappear
and by the fourth day you will feel a new energy in you that you have never
known before. Then giddiness will disappear, and just a smooth feeling of
drunkenness will be there. So don't try to be alert about what is happening.
Let it happen and become one with the happening.
In the morning, alert; in the afternoon, half alert, half unalert; in the night, completely unalert. The circle is complete. And then fall down on the ground on your stomach. If anybody feels any sort of pain in the navel center lying down on the ground, then he can turn on the back, otherwise not. If you feel something, a very deep painful sensation in the stomach, then turn on your back, otherwise not. The navel in contact with the earth will give you such a blissful feeling -- just the same as once you had, but now you have forgotten, when you were a child lying down on your mother's breast, completely unaware of any worry, any anxiety, so one with the mother, your heart beating with her heart, your breath in tune with her breath.
The same will happen with the earth because earth is the mother. That's why Hindus have been calling earth the mother and sky the father. Be rooted in it. Feel a merger as if you have dissolved. The body has become one with the earth; the form is there no more. Only earth exists; you are not there. This is what I mean when I say break the cup completely: forget that you are. The earth is, and dissolve in it.
During the one hour of whirling the music will continue. Many will fall before the hour but everybody has to fall by the time the music stops. So if you feel that you are still not in the state of falling then go faster and faster. After forty-five minutes go completely mad, so by the time the hour is complete you have fallen. And the feeling if falling is beautiful, so don't manipulate it. Fall, and when you have fallen then turn on your stomach, be merged, close your eyes. This merger has to be there for one hour.
In the morning, alert; in the afternoon, half alert, half unalert; in the night, completely unalert. The circle is complete. And then fall down on the ground on your stomach. If anybody feels any sort of pain in the navel center lying down on the ground, then he can turn on the back, otherwise not. If you feel something, a very deep painful sensation in the stomach, then turn on your back, otherwise not. The navel in contact with the earth will give you such a blissful feeling -- just the same as once you had, but now you have forgotten, when you were a child lying down on your mother's breast, completely unaware of any worry, any anxiety, so one with the mother, your heart beating with her heart, your breath in tune with her breath.
The same will happen with the earth because earth is the mother. That's why Hindus have been calling earth the mother and sky the father. Be rooted in it. Feel a merger as if you have dissolved. The body has become one with the earth; the form is there no more. Only earth exists; you are not there. This is what I mean when I say break the cup completely: forget that you are. The earth is, and dissolve in it.
During the one hour of whirling the music will continue. Many will fall before the hour but everybody has to fall by the time the music stops. So if you feel that you are still not in the state of falling then go faster and faster. After forty-five minutes go completely mad, so by the time the hour is complete you have fallen. And the feeling if falling is beautiful, so don't manipulate it. Fall, and when you have fallen then turn on your stomach, be merged, close your eyes. This merger has to be there for one hour.
So the night meditation will be of two hours, from seven o'clock to nine o'clock. Don't eat anything before it. At nine o'clock the suggestion will be given to come out of this deep drunkenness, this ecstasy. Even out of it you may not be able to walk correctly, but don't be disturbed, enjoy it. Then take your food and go to sleep.
Even now, the chair is empty. But I was always with you up till now in all the camps because you were not ready. Now I feel you are ready. And you must be helped to get more ready to work in my absence, because feeling that I am there you may feel a certain enthusiasm that is false. Just feeling that I am present you may do things which you never wanted to do; just to impress me you may exert more. That is not of much help, because only that can be helpful which comes out of your being. My chair will be there, I will be watching you, but you feel completely free. And don't think that I am not there because that may depress you, and then that depression will disturb your meditation.
I will be there, and if you meditate rightly whenever your meditation is exactly tuned, you will see me. So that will be the criterion of whether you are really meditating or not. Many of you will be able to see me more intensely than you can see me right now, and whenever you see me, you can be certain that things are happening in a right direction. So this will be the criterion. By the end of this camp I hope ninety percent of you will have seen me. Ten percent may miss because of their minds.
So if you see me don't start thinking about it, what is happening, don't start thinking whether it is imagination or a projection or am I really there. Don't think, because if you think immediately I will disappear; thinking will become a barrier. The dust will come on the mirror and there will be no reflection. Whenever the dust is not there, suddenly you will become aware of me more than you can be aware here right now. To be aware of the physical body is not much awareness; to be aware of the nonphysical being is real awareness.
You must learn to work without me. You cannot be here always, you will have to go far away; you cannot hang around me forever, you have other works to do. You have come from different countries all over the world; you will have to go. For a few days you will be here with me, but if you become addicted to my physical presence then rather than being a help it may become a disturbance, because then when you go away, you will miss me. Your meditation should be such here that it can happen without my presence, then wherever you go the meditation will not be in any way affected.
And this too has to be remembered: I cannot always be in this physical body with you; one day or another the physical vehicle has to be dropped. My work is complete as far as I am concerned. If I am carrying this physical vehicle, it is just for you; some day, it has to be dropped. Before it happens you must be ready to work in my absence, or in my nonphysical presence which means the same. And once you can feel me in my absence you are free of me, and then even if I am not here in this body the contact will not be lost.
It always happens when a Buddha is there: his physical presence becomes so meaningful. and then he dies. Everything is shattered. Even a disciple like Ananda, his most intimate disciple, started crying and weeping when Buddha said, "Now I have to leave this body." For forty years Ananda was with Buddha, twenty-four hours, just like a shadow. He started crying and weeping like a child; suddenly he had become an orphan. Buddha asked," What are you doing?"
Ananda said, "It will be impossible now for me to grow. I couldn't grow when you were there so how can I grow now? It may be now millions of lives before I come across a buddha again, so I am lost."
Buddha said, "My understanding is different, Ananda. When I am not there you may become enlightened immediately, because this has been my feeling -- you have become too much attached to me, and that attachment is working like a block. You have become too much attached to me; that very attachment is working like a barrier."
And this happened as Buddha said. The day Buddha died, Ananda became enlightened. There was nothing to cling to then. But why wait? When I die, then you will become enlightened? Why wait?
My chair can be empty; you can feel my absence. And remember, only when you can feel my absence can you feel my presence. If you cannot see me while my physical vehicle is not there, you have not seen me at all. This is my promise: I will be there in the empty chair, the empty chair will not really be empty. So behave! The chair will not be empty, but it is better that you learn to be in contact with my nonphysical being. That is a deeper, more intimate touch and contact.
That is why I say a new phase of my work starts with this camp, and I am calling it a Samadhi Sadhana Shibir. It is not only meditation, it is absolute ecstasy that I am going to teach to you. It is not only the first step, it is the last. Only no mind on your part is needed and everything is ready. Just be alert not to think much. The remaining time between these three meditations, remain more and more silent, don't talk. If you want to do something, laugh, dance: do something intense and physical but not mental.
Go for a long walk, go jogging on the grounds, jump under the sun, lie down on the earth, look at the sky, enjoy, but don't allow the mind to function much. Laugh, cry, weep, but don't think. If you can be without thinking for these three meditations and the time between them, then after three, four days you will feel suddenly a burden has disappeared. The heart has become light, the body weightless and you are ready to take a jump into the unknown.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Friday, August 10, 2012
GURDJIEFF SACRED DANCES
GEORGE
IVANOVITCH GURDJIEFF
G.I.Gurdjieff (1877-1949) was born in Alexandropol,
(between Russia and Turkey) and trained in Kars as both a priest and a
physician. For some twenty years, Gurdjieff travelled in the remotest region of
the Central Asia and the Middle East in search of a hidden knowledge with a
group of Remarkable Men. These years were crucial in the moulding of his
thought. On his return, he began to gather pupils in Moscow before the first
World War and continued his work with a small party of followers while moving,
during the year of the Russian revolution, to Essentuki in the Caucasus, and
then through Tiflis, Constantinople, Berlin and London to the Chateau du
Prieuré near Paris, where he re-opened his Institute for the Harmonious
Development of Man in 1922 on a larger scale.
G. I. Gurdjieff
-Meetings with Remarkable Men-
G.I.Gurdjieff used the word "WORK" as
inner-search for self-development.
He gave particular attention to the body as a tool, for the WORK, through the practice of Sacred Dances and Movements, inner exercises and self observation, both while dancing and specially in normal life situations.
One of his most famous statement related to it is:
He gave particular attention to the body as a tool, for the WORK, through the practice of Sacred Dances and Movements, inner exercises and self observation, both while dancing and specially in normal life situations.
One of his most famous statement related to it is:
"Remember yourself always and everywhere."
GURDJIEFF
SACRED DANCES OR GURDJIEFF MOVEMENTS
The Sacred Dances or Movements come from very
ancient traditions, some practiced and transmitted orally in hidden
monasteries. They came to be known at the beginning of the last century thanks
to G.I. Gurdjieff who, after mastering the science of the Dances, and creating
many new ones, started teaching them.
Not following any particular religion or philosophy,
the Sacred Dances include the essence of all religions. The Sufi influence can
be seen in some; many others are based on the Enneagram's mathematical
structure, spiritual and esoteric meaning. Others again come from Christian,
Buddhist, Islamic and Greek traditions. Each Dance is composed of a series of
postures done to specific piano music, created to take the dancers to a place
where they can no longer rely on mechanical procedure to perform the dance; but
must instead stay present and open to a wisdom from within. The dancer then,
may begin to experience their meaning.
To me, the Sacred Dances are the expression of some
higher power, and they can give to the practitioner the experience of something
sacred rising spontaneously from within. I experience their sacredness and
meaning at different levels:
PHYSICAL:
- The body positions and sequences are very unusual: this is the first step towards sensing the body differently from the way I do habitually in daily life.
- Each position has different effects on the body's energy; increasing flow, leading to a sense of energetic balance and sometimes releasing energetic blocs.
- The practice of the Sacred Dances can result in improved:
- body coordination; by working on the left and right brain hemispheres.
- body balance; by developing the sense of 'grounding' and of accurate body awareness.
- body posture; by creating relaxation through becoming aware of tensions.
- Some people experience healing effects from practicing the Dances.
EMOTIONAL:
- I become more detached and even non-identified with my emotions during the practice and this carries over into my daily life.
- I learn to distinguish between real emotions and what Gurdjieff calls 'identifications'.
- I experience a deeper connection with my heart, that depends less on outside causes like the approval of others. I feel acceptance, surrender, letting go and trust rising naturally, as well as a profound gratitude to All.
MENTAL:
- I notice clearly when my attention is taken away by irrelevant thinking and this improves my ability to be present.
- I become aware of and understand my habitual behavior patterns.
- I realize how my mental state can effect my body and emotions.
- I connect more easily with higher mental states like watchfulness and intuition.
PHYSICAL:
- The body positions and sequences are very unusual: this is the first step towards sensing the body differently from the way I do habitually in daily life.
- Each position has different effects on the body's energy; increasing flow, leading to a sense of energetic balance and sometimes releasing energetic blocs.
- The practice of the Sacred Dances can result in improved:
- body coordination; by working on the left and right brain hemispheres.
- body balance; by developing the sense of 'grounding' and of accurate body awareness.
- body posture; by creating relaxation through becoming aware of tensions.
- Some people experience healing effects from practicing the Dances.
EMOTIONAL:
- I become more detached and even non-identified with my emotions during the practice and this carries over into my daily life.
- I learn to distinguish between real emotions and what Gurdjieff calls 'identifications'.
- I experience a deeper connection with my heart, that depends less on outside causes like the approval of others. I feel acceptance, surrender, letting go and trust rising naturally, as well as a profound gratitude to All.
MENTAL:
- I notice clearly when my attention is taken away by irrelevant thinking and this improves my ability to be present.
- I become aware of and understand my habitual behavior patterns.
- I realize how my mental state can effect my body and emotions.
- I connect more easily with higher mental states like watchfulness and intuition.
When I surrender to the postures of the Dances with their meaning; to the impact of the music with its vibration, and I stay present to all that is happening in that moment on the three levels described above, I experience the direct touch of the Sacred. Each time this comes with a new manifestation and a different flavor. From this space I can recognize a very gentle yet very strong power - something like a Master or a God - hidden in the Dances. These experiences lead me to see myself from a higher level of consciousness, and it is this that I aim to share through my work and the teaching of the Sacred Dances. These above are only words in which I describe my experience.
ONLY BY PRACTICING AND SENSING THE EFFECT OF THE SACRED DANCES CAN ONE HAVE THEDIRECT EXPERIENCE!
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
HISTORY OF DANCE
Dance and music
It
is unlikely that any human society (at any rate until the invention of
puritanism) has denied itself the excitement and pleasure of dancing.
Like cave painting, the first purpose of dance is probably ritual -
appeasing a nature spirit or accompanying a rite of passage. But losing oneself
in rhythmic movement with other people is an easy form of intoxication.
Pleasure can never have been far away.
Rhythm,
indispensable in dancing, is also a basic element of music. It is natural to
beat out the rhythm of the dance with sticks. It is natural to accompany the
movement of the dance with rhythmic chanting. Dance and music begin as partners
in the service of ritual.
Dance as ritual
In
most ancient civilizations, dancing before the god is an important element in
temple ritual. In Egypt the priests and priestesses, accompanied by harps and
pipes, perform stately movements which mime significant events in the story of
a god, or imitate cosmic patterns such as the rhythm of night and day.
At
Egyptian funerals, women dance to express the grief of the mourners.
Sacred
occasions in Greek shrines, such as thegames at Olympia from the 8th
century BC, are inaugurated with dancing by the temple virgins. Thechoros is
originally just such a dance, performed in a circle in honour of a god. In the
6th century it becomes the centrepiece ofGreek theatre.
In
India the formalized hand movements of the priestesses inHindu templesare
described in documents from as early as the 1st century AD. Each precise
gesture is of subtle significance. A form of classical dance based upon them -
known as Bharata Nhatyam - is still performed by highly skilled practitioners
today.
Dance as ecstasy
Any
sufficiently uninhibited society knows that frantic dancing, in a mood heightened
by pounding rhythm and flowing alcohol, will set the pulse racing and induce a
mood of frenzied exhilaration.
This
is exemplified in the Dionysiac dances of ancient Greece. Villagers,
after harvesting the grapes, celebrate the occasion with a drunken orgy in
honour of Dionysus, god of wine (whose Roman name is Bacchus). Their stomping
makes a favourite scene on Greek vases; and dancing women of this kind, whose
frenzy even sweeps them into an act of murder, are immortalized in a tragedy,
theBacchae, byEuripides. Short of this unfortunate extreme, all social dances
promise the same desirable mood of release and excitement.
Dance as entertainment, dance as
display
Egyptian
paintings, from as early as about 1400 BC, depict another eternal appeal of
dancing. Scantily clad girls, accompanied by seated musicians, cavort
enticingly on the walls of tombs. They will delight the male occupant during
his residence in the next world. But dancing girls are for this world too. From
princely banquet to back-street strip club, they require no explanation.
Entertainment,
and the closely related theme of display, underlies the story of public dance.
In the courts of Europe spectacles of this kind lead eventually
toballet.
Ballet in France: 16th - 17th
century AD
A
favourite entertainment in Renaissance France and Italy involves ladies and
gentlemen of the court being wheeled into the banqueting hall on scenic floats
from which they descend to perform a dance. Such festivities are much
encouraged byCatherine de Médicis after she marries into the French royal
family.
In
1581 a significant step forward is taken by Catherine's director of court
festivals, Baltazar de Beaujoyeulx. For a wedding celebration he produces theBalet
Comique de la Reine, combining dance (which he describes as being just
"geometric patterns of people dancing together") with the narrative
interest of a comedy. It is the first dramatic ballet.
This
French and Italian love of dance continues in the next century. At the court of
Savoy, in Turin, there is a strong tradition of lavish amateur ballets for any
festive occasion in the mid-17th century.
In
France Louis XIII, son of Marie de Médicis, loves to show off his talents in
this line - although, reports a contemporary, he "never performed anything
but ridiculous characters". The king's typical roles include a wandering
musician, a Dutch captain, a grotesque warrior, a farmer and a woman. His son
Louis XIV enjoys similar pleasures, but his roles have a little more classical
gravitas - a Bacchante, a Titan, a Muse and (presumably a favourite) Apollo
dressed as the sun.
The
dancers in court ballets are the courtiers themselves, and a large part of the
pleasure comes from watching one's friends prance about in spectacular
costumes. The English diarist John Evelyn sees Louis XIV dancing in Paris in
1651; he marvels not so much at the dancing as at so manySumptuously attired
aristocrats.
But
Louis XIV himself is genuinely interested in dancing, and in 1661 he decides
that his colleagues are not up to scratch. He brings together the best Parisian
dancing masters to form the Académie Royale de Danse, where his friends' skills
may be honed. It is so successful that he follows it in 1669 with a similar Académie
Royale de Musique.
These
two institutions are merged to form the Paris Opéra (still in existence today).
From 1672 professional dancers are trained. The institution settles down into
what is recognizably a ballet company.
The
first director, Pierre Beauchamp, choreographs many ballet sequences with music
by Lully and others - and he devises his own system for recording the steps.
(He is often credited with inventing the five classic positions for the feet,
but more probably he is merely the first to record them.)
A
spectacular ballet by Lully and Beauchamp isLe Triomphe de l'Amour, first
performed in 1681 with Beauchamp dancing Mars accompanied by ladies and
gentlemen of the court. Four months later the same ballet is performed again,
in a public theatre, with a significant innovation - professional female
dancers.
The
female ensemble is led by Mlle de Lafontaine, the world's first prima
ballerina. She stars in many other ballets over the next twelve years (earning
the title reine de la danse, "queen of the dance") before
retiring into a convent.
Lafontaine
and her colleagues are constrained by the heavy dresses which convention forces
them to wear on stage, but the men suffer less restriction (when dancing heroic
roles their usual costume is akin to a Roman soldier's short tunic, coming half
way down the thigh).
Virtuoso male dancing rapidly becomes one of the great
attractions of ballet. The first to demonstrate it is Jean Balon, who is with
the Paris Opéra from 1691 to 1710. Famous for his lightness and agility, his
name is possibly commemorated in the term "ballon" - still used today
for the moment when a dancer can seem to pause in mid-air during a
jump.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
ANCIENT ART AND RITUAL
ANCIENT
ART AND RITUAL
CHAPTER
I
ART
AND RITUAL
THE title of this book may strike the reader as
strange and even dissonant. What have art and ritual to do together? The
ritualist is, to the modern mind, a man concerned perhaps unduly with fixed
forms and ceremonies, with carrying out the rigidly pre-scribed ordinances of a
church or sect. The artist, on the other hand, we think of as free in thought
and untrammelled by convention in practice; his tendency is towards licence.
Art and ritual, it is quite true, have diverged to-day; but the title of this book
is chosen advisedly. Its object is to show that these two divergent
developments have a common root, and that neither can be understood without the
other. It is at the outset one
and the same impulse that sends a man to church and
to the theatre.
Such a statement may sound to-day paradoxical, even
irreverent. But to the Greek of the sixth, fifth, and even fourth century B.C.,
it would have been a simple truism. We shall see this best by following an
Athenian to his theatre, on the day of the great Spring Festival of Dionysos.
Passing through the entrance-gate to the theatre on
the south side of the Acropolis, our Athenian citizen will find himself at once
on holy ground. He is within a temenos or precinct, a place "cut
off" from the common land and dedicated to a god. He will pass to the left
(Fig. 2, p.
144) two temples standing near to each other, one of earlier, the other of
later date, for a temple, once built, was so sacred that it would only be
reluctantly destroyed. As he enters the actual theatre he will pay nothing for
his seat; his attendance is an act of worship, and from the social point of
view obligatory; the entrance fee is there-fore paid for him by. the State.
The theatre is open to all Athenian citizens, but
the ordinary man will not venture to
seat himself in the front row. In the front row, and
that only, the seats have backs, and the central seat of this row is an
arm-chair; the whole of the front row is permanently reserved, not for
individual rich men who can afford to hire "boxes," but for certain
State officials, and these officials are all priests. On each seat the name of
the owner is inscribed; the central seat is "of the priest of Dionysos Eleuthereus,"
the god of the precinct. Near him is the seat "of the priest of Apollo the
Laurel-Bearer," and again "of the priest of Asklepios," and
"of the priest of Olympian Zeus," and so on round the whole front
semicircle. It is as though at His Majesty's the front row of stalls was
occupied by the whole bench of bishops, with the Archbishop of Canterbury
enthroned in the central stall.
The theatre at Athens is not open night by night,
nor even day by day. Dramatic performances take place only at certain high
festivals of Dionysos in winter and spring. It is, again, as though the modern
theatre was open only at the festivals of the Epiphany and of Easter. Our
modern, at least our Protestant, custom is in direct contrast. We
tend on great religious festivals rather to close
than to open our theatres. Another point of contrast is in the time allotted to
the performance. We give to the theatre our after-dinner hours, when work is
done, or at best a couple of hours in the afternoon. The theatre is for us a
recreation. The Greek theatre opened at sunrise, and the whole day was
consecrated to high and strenuous religious attention. During the five or six
days of the great Dionysia, the whole city was in a state of unwonted
sanctity, under a taboo. To distrain a debtor was illegal; any personal
assault, however trifling, was sacrilege.
Most impressive and convincing of all is the
ceremony that took place on the eve of the performance. By torchlight,
accompanied by a great procession, the image of the god Dionysos himself was
brought to the theatre and placed in the orchestra. Moreover, he came not only
in human but in animal form. Chosen young men of the Athenians in the flower of
their youth--epheboi--escorted to the precinct a splendid bull. It was
expressly ordained that the bull should be "worthy of the god "; he
was,
in fact, as we shall presently see, the primitive
incarnation of the god. It is, again, as though in our modern theatre there
stood, "sanctifying all things to our use and us to His service," the
human figure of the Saviour, and beside him the Paschal Lamb.
But now we come to a strange thing. A god presides
over the theatre, to go to the theatre is an act of worship to the god
Dionysos, and yet, when the play begins, three i times out of four of Dionysos
we hear nothing. We see, it may be, Agamemnon returning from Troy, Clytemnestra
waiting to slay him, the vengeance of Orestes, the love of Phædra for
Hippolytos, the hate of Medea and the slaying of her children: stories
beautiful, tragic, morally instructive it may be, but scarcely, we feel,
religious. The orthodox Greeks themselves sometimes complained that in the
plays enacted before them there was "nothing to do with Dionysos."
If drama be at the outset divine, with its roots in
ritual, why does it issue in an art profoundly solemn, tragic, yet purely
human? The actors wear ritual vestments like those of the celebrants at the
Eleusinian mysteries.
[paragraph continues] Why, then, do we find
them, not executing a religious service or even a drama of gods and goddesses,
but rather impersonating mere Homeric heroes and heroines? Greek drama, which
seemed at first to give us our clue, to show us a real link between ritual and
art, breaks down, betrays us, it would seem, just at the crucial moment, and
leaves us with our problem on our hands.
Had we only Greek ritual and art we might well
despair. The Greeks are a people of such swift constructive imagination that
they almost always obscure any problem of origins. So fair and magical are
their cloud-capp’d towers that they distract our minds from the task of digging
for foundations. There is scarcely a problem in the origins of Greek mythology
and religion that has been solved within the domain of Greek thinking only.
Ritual with them was, in the case of drama, so swiftly and completely
transmuted into art that, had we had Greek material only to hand, we might
never have marked the transition. Happily, however, we are not confined within
the Greek paradise. Wider fields are open to us; our subject is not only Greek,
but ancient art and ritual. We can turn at
once to the Egyptians, a people slower-witted than
the Greeks, and watch their sluggish but more instructive operations. To one
who is studying the development of the human mind the average or even stupid
child is often more illuminating than the abnormally brilliant. Greece is often
too near to us, too advanced, too modern, to be for comparative purposes
instructive.
Of all Egyptian, perhaps of all ancient deities, no
god has lived so long or had so wide and deep an influence as Osiris. He stands
as the prototype of the great class of resurrection-gods who die that they may
live again. His sufferings, his death, and his resurrection were enacted year
by year in a great mystery-play at Abydos. In that mystery-play was set forth,
first, what the Greeks call his agon, his contest with his enemy Set; then
his pathos, his suffering, or downfall and defeat, his wounding, his
death, and his burial; finally, his resurrection and "recognition,"
his anagnorisis either as himself or as his only begotten son Horus.
Now the meaning of this thrice-told tale we shall consider later; for the
moment we are concerned
only with the fact that it is set forth both in art
and ritual.
At the festival of Osiris small images of the god
were made of sand and vegetable earth, his cheek bones were painted green and
his face yellow. The images were cast in a mould of pure gold, representing the
god as a mummy. After sunset on the 24th day of the month Choiak, the effigy of
Osiris was laid in a grave and the image of the previous year was removed. The
intent of all this was made transparently clear by other rites. At the
beginning of the festival there was a ceremony of ploughing and sowing. One end
of the field was sown with barley, the other with spelt; another part with
flax. While this was going on the chief priest recited the ritual of the
"sowing of the fields." Into the "garden" of the god, which
seems to have been a large pot, were put sand and barley, then fresh living
water from the inundation of the Nile was poured out of a golden vase over the
"garden" and the barley was allowed to grow up. It was the symbol of
the resurrection of the god after his burial, "for the growth of the garden
is the growth of the divine substance."
The death and resurrection of the gods, and pari
passu of the life and fruits of the earth, was thus set forth in ritual,
but--and this is our immediate point--it was also set forth in definite,
unmistakable art. In the great temple of Isis at Philæ there is a chamber
dedicated to Osiris. Here is represented the dead Osiris. Out of his body
spring ears of corn, and a priest waters the growing stalk from a pitcher. The
inscription to the picture reads: This is the form of him whom one may not
name, Osiris of the mysteries, who springs from the returning waters. It is but
another presentation of the ritual of the month Choiak, in which effigies of
the god made of earth and corn were buried. When these effigies were taken up
it would be found that the corn had sprouted actually from the body of the god,
and this sprouting of the grain would, as Dr. Frazer says, be "hailed as
an omen, or rather as the cause of the growth of the crops." 1
Even more vividly is the resurrection set forth in
the bas-reliefs that accompany the great Osiris inscription at Denderah. Here
the god is represented at first as a mummy
swathed and lying flat on his bier. Bit by bit he is
seen raising himself up in a series of gymnastically impossible positions, till
at last he rises from a bowl--perhaps his "garden"--all but erect,
between the out-spread wings of Isis, while before him a male figure holds the crux
ansata, the "cross with a handle," the Egyptian symbol of life. In
ritual, the thing desired, i. e. the resurrection, is acted, in art
it is represented.
No one will refuse to these bas-reliefs the title of
art. In Egypt, then, we have clearly an instance--only one out of many--where
art and ritual go hand in hand. Countless bas-reliefs that decorate Egyptian
tombs and temples are but ritual practices translated into stone. This, as we
shall later see, is an important step in our argument. Ancient art and ritual are
not only closely connected, not only do they mutually explain and illustrate
each other, but, as we shall presently find, they actually arise out of a
common human impulse.
The god who died and rose again is not of course
confined to Egypt; he is world-wide. When Ezekiel (viii. 14) "came to the
gate of
the Lord's house which was toward the north" he
beheld there the "women weeping for Tammuz." This
"abomination" the house of Judah had brought with them from Babylon.
Tammuz is Dumuzi, "the true son," or more fully, Dumuzi-absu,
"true son of the waters." He too, like Osiris, is a god of the life
that springs from inundation and that dies down in the heat of the summer. In
Milton's procession of false gods,
"Thammuz
came next behind,
Whose annual wound in Lebanon allured
The Syrian damsels to lament his fate
In amorous ditties all a summer's day."
Whose annual wound in Lebanon allured
The Syrian damsels to lament his fate
In amorous ditties all a summer's day."
Tammuz in Babylon was the young love of Ishtar. Each
year he died and passed below the earth to the place of dust and death,
"the land from which there is no returning, the house of darkness, where
dust lies on door and bolt." And the goddess went after him, and while she
was below, life ceased in the earth, no flower blossomed and no child of animal
or man was born.
We know Tammuz, "the true son," best by
one of his titles, Adonis, the Lord or King.
[paragraph continues] The Rites of Adonis were
celebrated at mid-summer. That is certain and memorable; for, just as the
Athenian fleet was setting sail on its ill-omened voyage to Syracuse, the
streets of Athens were thronged with funeral processions, everywhere was seen
the image of the dead god, and the air was full of the lamentations of weeping
women. Thucydides does not so much as mention the coincidence, but
Plutarch 1 tells us
those who took account of omens were full of concern for the fate of their
countrymen. To start an expedition on the day of the funeral rites of Adonis,
the Canaanitish "Lord," was no luckier than to set sail on a Friday,
the death-day of the "Lord" of Christendom.
The rites of Tammuz and of Adonis, celebrated in the
summer, were rites of death rather than of resurrection. The emphasis is on the
fading and dying down of vegetation rather than on its upspringing. The reason
of this is simple and will soon become manifest. For the moment we have only to
note that while in Egypt the rites of Osiris are represented as much by art as
by ritual, in Babylon and Palestine in the feasts of Tammuz
and Adonis it is ritual rather than art that
obtains.
We have now to pass to another enquiry. We have seen
that art and ritual, not only in Greece but in Egypt and Palestine, are closely
linked. So closely, indeed, are they linked that we even begin to suspect they
may have a common origin. We have now to ask, what is it that links art and
ritual so closely together, what have they in common? Do they start from the
same impulse, and if so why do they, as they develop, fall so widely asunder?
It will clear the air if we consider for a moment
what we mean by art, and also in somewhat greater detail what we mean by
ritual.
Art, Plato 1 tells us
in a famous passage of the Republic, is imitation; the artist imitates natural
objects, which are themselves in his philosophy but copies of higher realities.
All the artist can do is to make a copy of a copy, to hold up a mirror to
Nature in which, as he turns it whither he will, "are reflected sun and
heavens and earth and man," anything
and everything. Never did a statement so false, so
wrong-headed, contain so much suggestion of truth--truth which, by the help of
analysing ritual, we may perhaps be able to disentangle. But first its falsehood
must be grasped, and this is the more important as Plato's misconception in
modified form lives on to-day. A painter not long ago thus defined his own art:
"The art of painting is the art of imitating solid objects upon a flat
surface by means of pigments." A sorry life-work! Few people to-day,
perhaps, regard art as the close and realistic copy of Nature; photography has
at least scotched, if not slain, that error; but many people still regard art
as a sort of improvement on or an "idealization" of Nature. It is the
part of the artist, they think, to take suggestions and materials from Nature,
and from these to build up, as it were, a revised version. It is, perhaps, only
by studying those rudimentary forms of art that are closely akin to ritual that
we come to see how utterly wrong-headed is this conception.
Take the representations of Osiris that we have just
described--the mummy rising bit by bit from his bier. Can any one maintain
that art is here a copy or imitation of reality?
However "realistic" the painting, it represents a thing imagined not
actual. There never was any such person as Osiris, and if there had been, he
would certainly never, once mummified, have risen from his tomb. There is no
question of fact, and the copy of fact, in the matter. Moreover, had there
been, why should anyone desire to make a copy of natural fact? The whole
"imitation" theory, to which, and to the element of truth it
contains, we shall later have occasion to return, errs, in fact, through
supplying no adequate motive for a wide-spread human energy. It is probably
this lack of motive that has led other theorizers to adopt the view that art is
idealization. Man with pardonable optimism desires, it is thought, to improve
on Nature.
Modern science, confronted with a problem like that
of the rise of art, no longer casts about to conjecture how art might have
arisen, she examines how it actually did arise. Abundant material has
now been collected from among savage peoples of an art so primitive that we
hesitate to call it art at
all, and it is in these inchoate efforts that we are
able to track the secret motive springs that move the artist now as then.
Among the Huichol Indians, 1 if the
people fear a drought from the extreme heat of the sun, they take a clay disk,
and on one side of it they paint the "face" of Father Sun, a circular
space surrounded by rays of red and blue and yellow which are called his
"arrows," for the Huichol sun, like Phœbus Apollo, has arrows for
rays. On the reverse side they will paint the progress of the sun through the
four quarters of the sky. The journey is symbolized by a large cross-like
figure with a central circle for midday. Round the edge are beehive-shaped
mounds; these represent the hills of earth. The red and yellow dots that
surround the hills are cornfields. The crosses on the hills are signs of wealth
and money. On some of the disks birds and scorpions are painted, and on one are
curving lines which mean rain. These disks are deposited on the altar of the
god-house and left, and then all is well. The intention might
be to us obscure, but a Huichol Indian would read it
thus: "Father Sun with his broad shield (or 'face') and his arrows rises
in the east, bringing money and wealth to the Huichols. His heat and the light
from his rays make the corn to grow, but he is asked not to interfere with the
clouds that are gathering on the hills."
Now is this art or ritual? It is both and neither. We distinguish
between a form of prayer and a work of art and count them in no danger of
confusion; but the Huichol goes back to that earlier thing, apresentation. He
utters, expresses his thought about the sun and his emotion about the sun and
his relation to the sun, and if "prayer is the soul's sincere desire"
he has painted a prayer. It is not a little curious that the same notion comes
out in the old Greek word for "prayer," euchè. The Greek, when
he wanted help in trouble from the "Saviours," the Dioscuri, carved a
picture of them, and, if he was a sailor, added a ship. Underneath he inscribed
the word euchè. It was not to begin with a "vow" paid, it was a
presentation of his strong inner desire, it was a sculptured prayer.
Ritual then involves imitation; but does
not arise out of it. It desires to recreate an
emotion, not to reproduce an object. A rite is, indeed, we shall later see (p. 42), a sort
of stereotyped action, not really practical, but yet not wholly cut loose from
practice, a reminiscence or an anticipation of actual practical doing; it is
fitly, though not quite correctly, called by the Greeks a dromenon,
"a thing done."
At the bottom of art, as its motive power and its
mainspring, lies, not the wish to copy Nature or even improve on her--the
Huichol Indian does not vainly expend his energies on an effort so
fruitless--but rather an impulse shared by art with ritual, the desire, that
is, to utter, to give out a strongly felt emotion or desire by representing, by
making or doing or enriching the object or act desired. The common source of
the art and ritual of Osiris is the intense, world-wide desire that the life of
Nature which seemed dead should live again. This common emotional factor
it is that makes art and ritual in their beginnings well-nigh
indistinguishable. Both, to begin with, copy an act, but not at first for the
sake of the copy. Only when the emotion dies down and is
forgotten does the copy become an end in itself, a
mere mimicry.
It is this downward path, this sinking of making to
mimicry, that makes us now-a-days think of ritual as a dull and formal thing.
Because a rite has ceased to be believed in, it does not in the least follow
that it will cease to be done. We have to reckon with all the huge forces
of habit. The motor nerves, once set in one direction, given the slightest
impulse tend always to repeat the same reaction. We mimic not only others but
ourselves mechanically, even after all emotion proper to the act is dead; and
then because mimicry has a certain ingenious charm, it becomes an end in itself
for ritual, even for art.
It is not easy, as we saw, to classify the Huichol
prayer-disks. As prayers they are ritual, as surfaces decorated they are specimens
of primitive art. In the next chapter we shall have to consider a kind of
ceremony very instructive for our point, but again not very easy to
classify--the pantomimic dances which are, almost all over the world, so
striking a feature in savage social and religious life, Are they to be classed
as ritual or art?
These pantomime dances lie, indeed, at the very
heart and root of our whole subject, and it is of the first importance that
before going further in our analysis of art and ritual, we should have some
familiarity with their general character and gist, the more so as they are a
class of ceremonies now practically extinct. We shall find in these dances the
meeting-point between art and ritual, or rather we shall find in them the rude,
inchoate material out of which both ritual and art, at least in one of its
forms, developed. Moreover, we shall find in pantomimic dancing a ritual
bridge, as it were, between actual life and those representations of life which
we call art.
In our next chapter, therefore, we shall study the
ritual dance in general, and try to understand its psychological origin; in the
following chapter (III) we shall take a particular dance of special importance,
the Spring Dance as practised among various primitive peoples. We shall then be
prepared to approach the study of the Spring Dance among the Greeks, which
developed into their drama, and thereby to, we hope, throw light on the
relation between ritual and art.
Ancient Art and Ritual
by Jane Harrison (1913.)
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