Summer Solstice at 5th Dimentional Rosekill: Be Light, Be Love, Bee Joy!



by Jana Astanov

Featured image Wreath making WomBYN’s circle at Rosekill Art Farm, 2021 with Katie Cercone, Kate Hamberger, Fann Perez, Claudia Perez, Maira Duarte, Valerie Sharp, Maria Mars Tsaguria.

This year we celebrate Summer Solstice at Rosekill with the intention of connecting and celebrating our community through 3 days of site specific performance art works, and communal rituals. 

June 18-20, 2021 Be Light, Be Love, Bee Joy!

Community festival. Intentional. Site specific. Cult of the Earth Mother and the planetary cycles.

My curatorial vision is to bring multicultural Solstice traditions, and through the practice of each artist weave them into the contemporary performance art in the spirit of magical transmutation within the land of the Rosekill Art Farm.

Participating artists:
Maira Duarte @dttp.nyc @lac.reme &Marc Mosteirin @marcmosteirin
Kate Hamberger & family @glambergerart Valerie Sharp @valerie.kathleen
Katie Cercone @0r__nah_spiriturlgangsta @gopushpops 
Fann Perez @fannsystem Claudia Perez @clau.zerez 
Maria Mars Tsaguria @wizardbitchh @cult24nyc Corvette @callmecorvette 
Niko van Egten @makebelieveav Josh Kil @yourejoskil @pataphaxitas 

Big thank you to our hosts Jill McDermid & Eric Hokanson

SLAVIC AND BALTIC RITUALS TO CELEBRATE SUMMER SOLSTICE

In ancient Slavic and Baltic traditions Summer Solstice, just like in the Sumerian and Babylonian cultures, is the most important ritual within the Alchemical Wheel of the Year. We welcome Solstice with a large bonfire, jump through it and dance around it, letting the fire burn through what needs to be released and cleansed. We also make Solstice wreaths and throw them on the waters of rivers, lakes, streams making intentions and sending our prayers to the Goddess of Water, Kupala also known as Mokosh which has roots in ancient Vedic texts as moksha, enlightenment. 

Polish Madonna channels the stars!

In my art practice I follow the cycles of nature and the cosmic events such as planetary alignments that heighten our ability to connect with the Universal Wisdom, with The Queen of Heavens, with SheUniverse. For many years I have focused on creating a ritual, a performance art piece, or a gathering to honour the Summer Solstice following the Slavic and Baltic traditional beliefs. In the ancient Slavic culture Summer Solstice was the most important of all the annual ceremonies. As in the past, also nowadays the Solstice occurs at the same time all over the world, when the Sun is directly overhead the Tropic of Cancer. The first day of summer can be on June 20, 21 or 22… Even though most people consider June 21 as the date of the June Solstice, it can happen anytime between June 20 and June 22 (very rare – the next one in 2203!). 

photo Jana Astanov + Niko van Egten collaboration, She Who Manifests Life: Summer Solstice &New Moon in Cancer Ritual, Rosekill, 2017.

During the pagan times the celebrations lasted for at least 3 days during which the people would give their prayers and ask for prosperity to the female deity of Water known as Kupala or Moksha depending on the Slavic tribe. Girls would dress in white, and throw wreaths made of flowers into lakes or rivers at the sunset making their wishes and intentions.

Historical background of Slavic &Baltic traditions of Summer Solstice 

Solstice night is celebrated in a very similar way in Finland, Sweden, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia, Belarus, Ukraine and Mazury Lake District of Poland where I was born. In all of these countries the rituals of Midsummer night have very strong folkloric roots.

Solstice Wreath

One of the strongest tradition that is cultivated to these days in all of the Slavic and Baltic countries is Summer Solstice wreath making. Young girls, dressed in white float flower wreaths on the water of rivers, streams, lakes, or even the Baltic sea.

Wreath making WomBYN’s circle at Rosekill Art Farm, 2021 with Katie Cercone, Kate Hamberger, Fann Perez, Claudia Perez, Maira Duarte, Valerie Sharp, Maria Mars Tsaguria.

photo Jana Astanov, She Who Manifests Life: Summer Solstice &New Moon in Cancer Ritual, Rosekill, 2017.

Fire Jumping

The best-known ritual is the lighting of the bonfire and jumping over it. This is seen as a way of guaranteeing prosperity and avoiding bad luck. Likewise, to not light the fire is to invite the destruction of your house by fire. The fire also frightened away mischievous spirits who avoided it at all costs, thus ensuring a good harvest. So, the bigger the fire, the further the mischievous spirits stayed away. The purpose of jumping over the fire is partly to purify, partly because they believed that those whose jump is very successful will get married during the following carnival.

The other traditions include singing songs and dancing until the sun sets, telling tales, searching to find the magic fern blossom at midnight, greeting the rising midsummer sun and washing the face with a morning dew. These are customs brought from pagan culture and beliefs. The latter Christian tradition is based on the reverence of Saint John. Poles, Latvians, and Lithuanians with the names Jana, Janina, Jan, Jonas and Jonė receive many greetings from their family, relatives and friends as this is also their Name Day which is a Slavic tradition stronger than an actual birthday.

The celebrations of Midsummer in Poland vary depending on the region. In Mazury Lake District in northern Poland it is called Noc Świętojańska which means St. John’s Night – the Eastern Pomeranian and Kashubian regions – midsummer is celebrated on June 23. People dress in traditional Polka dress, and girls throw wreaths made of flowers into the Baltic Sea, and into lakes or rivers. In many parts of Poland the Summer solstice is celebrated as Kupala Night. In the Mazury Lake District – North East of Poland the celebrations are more similar to those in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, and are based on folk ritual of setting the bonfires. 

Photo Jana Astanov+ Niko van Egten She Who Manifests Life: Summer Solstice &New Moon in Cancer Ritual, Rosekill, 2017.

Summer Solstice marks a change in the farming year, specifically the break between the completion of spring sowing and the hard work of summer hay-making.


With Gratitude,

Jana Astanov

photo Jana Astanov+ Niko van Egten collaboration, She Who Manifests Life: Summer Solstice Ritual, Rosekill, 2017.