Posy-Filled Pockets is a death-positive community project designed to encourage conversations about our mortality through Art, Academics, Industry and Advocacy. Illuminating storytelling, engaging activities, accessible information and community workshops in an easy, entertaining atmosphere.
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
End Scene
Film! Intrigue! Death! Murder! Booze!
That's right.
Booze. And Death. And Film.
Booze- because we are holding this month's event at the Iron Door!
Death- because that's what we do.
Film- because it is one of the most important media formats of our time.
Join us this Friday evening down in the Iron Door for an evening of mysteries, mirages, and murders real and reproduced as we explore the relationship between death and one of our favorite distractions - the magnificent world of moving pictures.
Friday, May 20th
7:30pm
$15
The Iron Door at the Holbrooke Hotel
212 West Main Street
Grass Valley, CA 95945
We would also like to thank everyone who gave to our GoFundMe campaign. Without your support we would not be bale to hold this month's event at the Holbrooke.
Thank you!
Thursday, March 24, 2016
A Lovely Corpse Recap
It was a dark and stormy night...
No seriously, it really was. We had a great time anyway. There were cookies.
Our Death & Beauty event "A Lovely Corpse" on Sunday, March 20th was indeed, quite lovely. Even though it was incredibly dark and pouring rain, a few new faces braved the storm from Sacramento to join the audience. They drank our Kool-Aid, and we're pretty sure they liked it.
Tim not only managed to make the subject of a mortician's wardrobe riveting and delivered some serious slides FINALLY, he took enough tasteful backside shots to possibly release his own beefcake calendar come 2017. (GOALS. WE HAVE THEM.)
In anticipation of Tim being slideless, he was, as usual, gifted with some creative ones we made for him. Boy did we look stupid when he busted out the best slides EVER. We think someone helped him. We would like them to help us too.
Posy-Filled Pockets, at your service. These faces are our helpful, informative faces. These are the faces we make when we're ad libbing our intro because Rachel has been busy planning shows two months ahead of time while neglecting the current one, and Tim's business picks up just enough to keep him locked up behind mortuary doors until the day before a show. Don't worry. We totally know what we're doing.
Did you see we had cookies? There were cookies.
Special Guest Marci Bennett from San Francisco's Odd Salon spoke on the Glamorization of Expiration. "Live fast, die young, leave a good-looking corpse." James Dean did not actually say that.
Courtney Williams entertained us with Fatal Fashions. Arsenic-laced formal wear, anyone? For those keeping score at home, at least two PFP participants were wearing items on her list.
No seriously, it really was. We had a great time anyway. There were cookies.
Our Death & Beauty event "A Lovely Corpse" on Sunday, March 20th was indeed, quite lovely. Even though it was incredibly dark and pouring rain, a few new faces braved the storm from Sacramento to join the audience. They drank our Kool-Aid, and we're pretty sure they liked it.
Either PFP Art Director Skye Beren has threatened them quietly, or they're into us. |
Resident PFP mortician Tim Lilyquist really DOES put the "fun" in....sorry. We know better. |
No. No we don't know better. We're liars that don't know better. |
Did you see we had cookies? There were cookies.
Rachel and Tim, your impeccably dressed, hand clutching hosts. |
Marci Bennett explains shows us horrific auto accidents and heroin addicts. For fashion. |
Courtney discussing her fatal fashion topic further with audience member and soap maven Normal Vincent of Outlaw Soaps |
Despite the horrible weather, our third evening event was the best one yet, and the presentations just keep getting better and better. Tim had slides! The next two months are big shows for us. In April we'll be focusing on the subject of suicide education and local resources, and in May we'll be making our big venue move to the Iron Door, under the historic Holbrooke Hotel, which we're hoping will be our new home for the evening events. (Workshops will remain at The Chapel of the Angels Mortuary.)
Keep an eye on our Facebook page as well as our Happenings page here on the blog for presentation announcements and upcoming shenanigans!
Rachel, Marci and Tim enjoy Skye Bergen's trip around the world with corpses all dressed up for the party. |
Come to our next event! We have cookies.
Sometimes there are cookies. You'll never know unless you show up. |
Monday, February 8, 2016
Upcoming Event - Death Eaters
Join us for Death Eaters, our second night of Posy-Filled Pockets!
Fatalities and food may seem like strange bedfellows, but the two intersect in a variety of intriguing fashions..
Rachel will introduce you to the last of the sin eaters, a historically brief but dreadful occupation consisting of ingesting the sins of others.
Jamaica is taking us back to the origins of the Last Meal, from death row to the final libations offered to French prisoners on the chopping block.
Tim is going to tell us something gross about bodies. We love it when he answers the questions we're too squeamish to ask but are dying to hear about. He totally gets us.
Then, less talking, more tasting as Amy and Skye present funeral foods and their origins as you "fake funeral crash" and sample the goods.
Ritual meals for the dead and the living, death by food in large and small doses, death-defying cuisine and things you just really, truly, shouldn't put in your mouth.
Join us as we hear a handful of surprising tales, sample funeral foods of different cultures, and toast to the life of Alan Rickman, the Deathiest Death Eater of all.
Rachel James - Richard Munslow: The Last Sin Eater
Jamaica Karr - Dining with The Damned: History of Last Meals and Serial Killer Cookbooks
Tim Lilyquist - The Corpse's Last Supper: Mechanics of it All
Presentation and Tasting:
Skye Bergen & Amy Sumner - Mourning Mastication
A journey through the kitchens of those left behind, with samples of funeral fare and the stories that go with them.
Fatalities and food may seem like strange bedfellows, but the two intersect in a variety of intriguing fashions..
Rachel will introduce you to the last of the sin eaters, a historically brief but dreadful occupation consisting of ingesting the sins of others.
Jamaica is taking us back to the origins of the Last Meal, from death row to the final libations offered to French prisoners on the chopping block.
Tim is going to tell us something gross about bodies. We love it when he answers the questions we're too squeamish to ask but are dying to hear about. He totally gets us.
Then, less talking, more tasting as Amy and Skye present funeral foods and their origins as you "fake funeral crash" and sample the goods.
Ritual meals for the dead and the living, death by food in large and small doses, death-defying cuisine and things you just really, truly, shouldn't put in your mouth.
Join us as we hear a handful of surprising tales, sample funeral foods of different cultures, and toast to the life of Alan Rickman, the Deathiest Death Eater of all.
Rachel James - Richard Munslow: The Last Sin Eater
Jamaica Karr - Dining with The Damned: History of Last Meals and Serial Killer Cookbooks
Tim Lilyquist - The Corpse's Last Supper: Mechanics of it All
Presentation and Tasting:
Skye Bergen & Amy Sumner - Mourning Mastication
A journey through the kitchens of those left behind, with samples of funeral fare and the stories that go with them.
Sunday, January 3, 2016
An Gorta Mor by guest blogger Shannon Haire
It takes a lot of suffering to be ranked among one of history’s worst tragedies and biggest losses of life.
![]() |
Photo by Shannon Haire - Used with Permission |
The famine that hit Ireland in 1845 has that unfortunate distinction. ‘An Gorta Mor’ (the Great Hunger) decimated the Irish population and over a five year period 1.5 million people starved to death or died of hunger-related causes. Another two million fled Ireland in order to escape that fate, and the native population hasn’t recovered since. It is estimated that there are more Irish people spread throughout the world than there are in Ireland itself, and that has been the case ever since the Great Famine began.
Photo by Chmee2 |
Ireland is a mecca for memorials, historical places, and public sculpture, but few are as somber and potent as the Famine Memorial on the banks of the River Liffey in Dublin. The memorial sculpture was created by Rowan Gillespie and unveiled in 1997. It consists of emaciated men, women, and children trudging along the banks of the river, with various expressions of sadness, despair, and resignation. The horrifying bronze sculptures also include a starving dog walking behind the people. It is one of the most photographed public art pieces in all of Ireland.
![]() |
Photo by Eric Jones |
These statues are a permanent memorial to the many people who suffered and fled the Great Famine. It was built on the departure site of the Perseverance, one of the first famine ships to leave the area in 1846. The ship's captain was a seventy-four year old man who quit his office job to transport hundreds of starving people from Dublin to America. All passengers arrived safely on that maiden voyage and the Perseverance was one of the first of thousands of ships to make that desperate crossing.
Rowan Gillespie’s haunting sculptures are a stark reminder of the tragic loss of life and home that the Irish people suffered and his vision captures the utter despair that millions of families were feeling during the great famine. These eerie memorial statues make it impossible to walk the banks of the river without feeling the desolate ghosts of the dead. In the water there is a replicated famine boat that doubles as one of the many famine museums located throughout Ireland. The ‘Jeanie Johnston’ is a is a fitting backdrop to the darkness of Gillespie’s pieces, and both ensure that those who visit the area will forever remember one of the biggest tragedies in Irish history.
Shannon Haire is an Irish history blogger and author. Her newly released book, Petticoats, Patriots, and Partition, is available on Amazon.com. She blogs regularly about Irish history, politics, and current events on her increasingly popular blog, Choosing the Green - RoghnĂș Glas
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)