Please Help Invigorate the Common Well

A Letter from Sandy Spieler, Artistic Director,
In the Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre

Water!As a lover of Water, I am increasingly alarmed by the growing water crisis in the world, and I am particularly stirred by the debates on Water “ownership”.

To be honest, I do not hear this debate—I feel it. I feel this word “ownership” paired with Water as a violation that rises from the inside of my very cells.

If Water is essential to all of Life, then access to healthy Water is essential for all Life, a “commons” for all to share! This is a BASIC RIGHT, isn’t it?

Why does this simple question open up such complexities of issues related to water quality and consumption as well as “ownership”?

Invigorate the Common Well, a public art/ public health project, rises from my desire to understand these questions within the tangible details of my daily life. It is an immersion into the complex geological and human systems that bring water to my thirst…through the lens of the dysfunctional drinking fountain in the lobby of our Avalon Theater.

Why my interest in this fountain?

According to local legend, there was once a beautiful fountain at the center of the Avalon Theater. Yet according to my memory of 19 years, the only trace remaining is a drinking fountain decorated with the sign “Out of Order”. Those who come thirsty to the Avalon now find their water for sale in plastic bottles in the Theater’s lobby.

I now see this broken fountain as a sad shrine to the neglect of our public “commons”. Instead of investigating what is wrong with our fountain and investing in public water health through its repair, our theater inadvertently has supported a system of privatized water through the sale of plastic bottled water.

To un-do this situation, we propose to repair our Fountain as an intentional act to assure healthy water for any and all who thirst.

Invigorate the Common Well accompanies the progress of the Fountain renovation in 3 Episodes investigating issues of water quality, quantity and “ownership”. (Description follows.) Performances begin in the Avalon Theater, and the next year, expand into the city of Minneapolis and beyond. Our intent is that Invigorate the Common Well will inspire multigenerational reverence for Water amidst the critical water issues facing us as global relatives. I believe that people will act for the COMMON GOOD when allowed education, opportunity and responsibility to do so. Invigorate the Common Well invites this possibility.

Your support of Invigorate the Common Well is vital NOW to lift this initiative from conception to reality. Your support will build a solid foundation for this multi-year vision of assuring health for the water, and health for the commons.

From one Water lover to another, many many thanks!!

-Sandy Spieler

Contributions can be sent to:
In the Heart of the Beast Theatre
Invigorate the Common Well
1500 E. Lake Street, Minneapolis, MN 55407

FlowInvigorate the Common Well

A Civic Project
A Sacred Project
A Communal Health Project

Initiated by
In the Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre
with the Tomales Bay Institute
To renew the “out of order” drinking fountain in the Avalon Theater through an episodic performance to raise the activism of the commons towards the health of our public water.
An Initiative:

To inspire gratitude for Water, one of the most precious gifts of life.

To connect our local drinking water experience with the impending global water crisis of  staggering proportions concerning water quality, consumption and ownership.

To listen to the teachings of water toward the interconnectedness of all life, as it tunes our hearts and minds towards the value of “the commons”, a founding principal of the USA.

To enhance citizen awareness of the Mississippi River as source of all public city water in Minneapolis, as well as much of St. Paul.

To invest our financial and imaginative resources towards “The Commons” - the non-partisan, collective assurance of healthy water for all - with a faith that sustainable, healthy systems are possible within urban and rural settings.

To educate the public about Minneapolis’ Public Water Works.

To conduct public art/ecology residencies throughout the region to invigorate public wells (drinking fountains) as places of meeting, of physical and spiritual sustenance while educating about major local and global water concerns.

To discourage the proliferation of plastic water bottles mounting up in land fills of the world.

To encourage the collective power of individual citizens to enact positive change upon the problems created by the accumulation of individual actions.

A Sacred Project:

Water is Life. Let us be grateful for this most precious gift. Let us see how water binds us to All of Life, to our histories, to our futures.

A Civic Project:

This project will involve the intersection of artists with partners from ecological, social, geological and civic fields, as well as with broad spectrums of the general public.

We will be inventing new forms of artistry that give honor to the vision and expertise of people working with water issues. Because this project carries the underlying value of responsible, participatory democracy in creating healthy communities, we will also invent forms that spur interaction of the public with the research presented. We will continually pose the question of our individual and collective responsibilities and activism in meeting the growing issues of local and global water stewardship.

We stand on the brink of a global water crisis of staggering proportions. Participation is not optional. This project will reveal how we already stand in the midst of this global situation through our own daily use of water, and will encourage community dialogue and responsive action.

A Communal Health Project:

People gather around public water sources. They greet each other. “How are you today?”

Stories are exchanged; people are refreshed by the generosity of water, and by the generosity of each other.

The quality of Water shared by one is the quality of water by all. Issues of water quality for the public good are mindfully inherent in the care of public water sources.

We are connected to each and everyone’s health issues as we consider the hazards seeping into all the waters.

The quantity of water is a finite global shared resource. To quote a grade school student expressing what she learned in a residency focused on water, “All the water we have, is all the water we have.”

Project Description :

Invigorate the Common Well is a unique theatrical collaboration between In the Heart of the Beast artists and a variety of partners from professional water fields.

Through 3 separate episodes, audiences journey through the many alarming facts and figures, realities and myths about our planet’s finite water system. The performance takes a myriad of forms, including puppet-shows, game shows, video poems, paintings and installations. Each show will also feature hands-on, interactive stations where people learn about real actions and changes they can make in their everyday lives to keep water safe, clean, and accessible to all.

The Well is DryEpisode #1:
COME TO THE WELL

When water is frozen: March 2-25, 2007

The essentialness of water for ALL of life,
water connected to physical, cultural and spiritual health.
Consider How consumption and ownership issues RELATE to THE ACCESS AND assurance of healthy water for all
A call for Invigorating the mindset and actions towards the Commons—the health and Wealth of ALL

Beneath the SurfaceEpisode #2:
BENEATH THE SURFACE

When life stirs under the earth: 2008 Season

The Water from our fountain connects to the Minneapolis Water WORKS, WHICH connects with the Mississippi RIVER, WHICH connects to all the Water in the World.
We are part of a huge watershed—consider how our actions affect the All
The Economy and Quality of Water--consider Public Water Works, and the Plastic Bottled Water Industry
A call for Invigorating the mindset and actions towards the Commons—the health and Wealth of ALL

Decorate the Well in GratitudeEpisode #3:
DECORATE THE WELL IN GRATITUDE

When our City celebrates Water: 2008 Season

We build a public fountain of beauty and NECESSITY
We “invigorate the commons” and learn to respect
and care for water
Dedicate and Decorate the Renewed Public Fountain

Partners and Advisors

Annika M. Bankston, P.E. (Minneapolis Water Works)

Gemma Bulos (International Water Networker, Director of the Million Voice Choir)

Tara Chadwick (Danza Mexica Cuauhtemoc of MN)

Whitney Clark (Executive Director, Friends of the Mississippi River)

Doug Freeman (Minnesota Arts and Ecology Alliance)

Susan Gust (GRASS ROUTES of U of Mn; City of Minneapolis Public Health Advisor)

Neal Hines (Civil Engineer Dept. of Limnology, Hydrology)

Seitu Jones (Artist, Advisor of Community and Public Spaces)

Jim Koplin (Researcher, Environmental Activist)

Ken Meter (Director of Crossroads Research)

Megan O’Hara (Networker for Cultural and Environmental Action)

Cynthia Pansing (Executive Director, Mississippi River Basin Alliance)

Mary Lynn Pulscher (Director of Environmental Education: Mpls Parks and Recreation)

Akhmiri Sekhr-Ra (Powderhorn Phillips Cultural Wellness Center)

Production Team

In The Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre

Sandy Spieler, Masanari Karahara, Malia Burkhart, Julie Kastigar, Esther Ouray,
Laura Harada, Duane Tougas, Paul Robinson, and HOBT administrative staff

Tomales Bay Institute

Rachel Breen, Julie Ristau

Blue Moon Video

Will Hommeyer