Zen For Head In Blue

Zen For Head In Blue

We loved being in the green year so much that when it came time to go on to our blue year we were having trouble making the change. So when our friend Penny Slinger was planning a big event as a benefit for her Goddess Temple called Shockra!, we chose to use the opportunity to get our heads wrapped around BLUE. She was also presenting the world premiere of her amazing new film, Rainbow Body Awakening which she co-created with her talented lover Dhiren Dasu, and we wanted to be supportive of their great work. Chakra artists unite!

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We needed some blue costumes made. So we called artist Sarah Stolar, who was not only willing to make our costumes, but to assist us in our performance as well. We decided to re-stage a Fluxus piece called Zen For Head, originally created by La Monte Young. At a big club in San Francisco, we dunked our heads in big bowls of blue paint and painted a long line on a scroll of white paper about 25 feet long. We left the painting displayed for people to enjoy.

After the performance, we finally felt like we had finally entered the blue year and have had blue on the brain ever since.

Photos by Randal Alan Smith

Blue Wedding to the Sea Video and Photos

Blue Wedding to the Sea Video and Photos


At the historic Grove House in Oxford, England, we married our lover the Sky. We asked for no material gifts, but invited people to collaborate on the creation of the wedding. Many wonderful creative people were extraordinarily generous in their offerings. The wedding was produced by Luke Dixon of the International Workshop Festival. So we also did a five-day workshop that led up to the wedding. Fourteen people attended our Making Love into Art and Art into Love Workshop, then presented their creations at the wedding. It poured rain most of the five days, and cleared up just in time for the wedding. Our Mistress of Ceremonies was Veronica Hart, the lovely adult film star and director. The owner of Grove House, Polly McLean, provided a beautiful environment in which to do the wedding. As some folks wanted to bring their children, we decided to stretch our boundaries and try to do a “family friendly” performance event. Something we have never done before! It was a real challenge, but we all pulled it off without a glitch. (A more detailed story to follow soon. For more info about the collaborators view the program.) Photos by Del La Grace Volcano, Sarah Ainsley, and Petra Joy

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Blue Wedding to the Sea Homily by Beatriz Preciado

Blue Wedding to the Sea Homily by Beatriz Preciado

We welcome you all, humans and animals, bio and trans, men and women, transgender bodies, mutants and survivors. You’ve been invited by Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens to celebrate the blue year of their love and together, forming a liquid community in order to marry the Sea.

We are here today to marry the Mediterranean Sea, stage of human traffic, colonization, war, but also of travel and communication.

To marry the Sea today, in 2009, is to embrace a sick being.

The Sea we are going to marry is, as we ourselves are,  polluted, sick, but alive and historically charged.

During the last two hundred years the human species has contributed to poisoning the water, killing fish and water mammals, threatening the health of the Sea and therefore putting at risk the survival of the planet.

For this, we come here today, to Venice, a city made of water, to ask the Sea for forgiveness.  We are here to give our love back to the Sea.

I thank Annie and Beth for inviting me, and for inviting us all, enter into their 7 year chronology of love, and for asking me   I also thank them for asking me to be the Anti-Priest for this wedding.

In their love chronology this is the year of the Visuddha chakra. The chakra of the throat. Let us all now touch our throat and feel the Visuddha chakra.

COMMUNICATION

This is the chakra of communication.
But communication is not just talking and hearing.  It is not only a matter of exchanging information, a practice transformed now into a consumer commodity.

The word communication comes form the latin root “munus”, meaning “ a gift that is given by someone to whom it doesn’t belong”. A gift that nevertheless doesn’t belong to the one who gives. Communication is a gift, something given, never a property.

Comunicare is “making common”, sharing the gift. This is the same root as the word community, immunity and meaning.

To communicate is to build community. But the political risk is to think that community can only be achieved through immunity.

The anxiety to be immune comes from the fear of the other. From the fear of not to be and not to have in common. The other is here seen as a threat to the community. An immune community is a community of Fear.

As we marry the sick Sea today, let us get rid of fear of the other, fear of queerness, fear of sickness, fear of ugliness, fear of the grotesque, fear of the virus, fear of death.

As we marry the sick Sea today, let us remember to construct community on “the social and biological vulnerability of the body” rather than on immunity and fear of the other.

For those of us who come from the civil rights fights concerning racial equality, for those of us who come feminism and from the fight for gender and sexual freedom, for those of us who come from queer and differently abled politics we feel the need to ask anew the question of community, of what is common to all of us, of what can we live without fearing the other.

Let us take this occasion to ask ourselves how do we want to live together, what is the community that we want to build.

I propose that we think of community as water. The most expanded chemical substance of the planet, present in every living being, though never having the same form: the water is changing constantly through a cycle of evaporation, becoming steam, and then becoming liquid, solidifying and becoming ice, the sky being just the sea in an altered form.
To get married to the water means to abandon identity and nationality and to become a liquid community able to permeate different soils and to cross political and moral frontiers without fear.

Let us communicate, build community and live together with all living human and non-human organisms.

As we marry the sick Sea today, let us be bound by a love bigger than human love, reaching non-human animals, the elements and the earth.

As we marry the Sea today, let us make love to water, have non-human sex with the elements.

As we marry the Sea today, we invite you to open your mouth, yours hands, yours vaginas, urethras and anuses to non-human love.

Annie and Beth I will now ask you to say your vows

BETO: Annie and Beth, are you ready to make your vows to each other?

Beth:  YES

Annie:  YES

Blue Wedding to the Sky Video and Photos

Blue Wedding to the Sky Video and Photos


At the historic Grove House in Oxford, England, we married our lover the Sky. We asked for no material gifts, but invited people to collaborate on the creation of the wedding. Many wonderful creative people were extraordinarily generous in their offerings. The wedding was produced by Luke Dixon of the International Workshop Festival. So we also did a five-day workshop that led up to the wedding. Fourteen people attended our Making Love into Art and Art into Love Workshop, then presented their creations at the wedding. It poured rain most of the five days, and cleared up just in time for the wedding. Our Mistress of Ceremonies was Veronica Hart, the lovely adult film star and director. The owner of Grove House, Polly McLean, provided a beautiful environment in which to do the wedding. As some folks wanted to bring their children, we decided to stretch our boundaries and try to do a “family friendly” performance event. Something we have never done before! It was a real challenge, but we all pulled it off without a glitch. (A more detailed story to follow soon. For more info about the collaborators view the program.) Photos by Del La Grace Volcano, Sarah Ainsley, and Petra Joy

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Blue Wedding to the Sky Homily

Blue Wedding to the Sky Homily

Written and Performed by Luke Dixon

In southern Africa the Xhosa people call a sky without clouds a lonely sky. We are here today to ensure that the sky will never be lonely again. We are here today to marry the sky. The blue of the sky reminds us of the blue of the fifth chakra. The chakra of open clear communication, of feelings and of thoughts and of creativity. It is the chakra of releasing and of breathing. It is the chakra of the life-force and of healing. As we look at the sky above us, let us remember the power and importance of communication – of being free to speak what is in our hearts and listen to what is in the hearts of others. Annie and Beth I will now ask you to say your vows.