Friday, August 31, 2012

Cape Cod Chronicle Interview


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"Cape Cod Goddess Festival Celebrates Sacred Feminine

by Jennifer Sexton

HARWICH---The Goddess is alive and magic is afoot at the first annual Cape Cod Goddess Festival, Saturday, Sept. 1 at noon until Sunday, Sept 2 at 7 p.m. at the Harwich Junior Theater Arts Center, 265 Sisson Rd.


The festival will feature performances, art, gifts, classes, kids’ activities, metaphysical vendors and more, celebrating feminine energy and the sacred space where feminine and masculine energy create synergy. The idea for the festival began when creator and organizer Pandora Peoples, a clairvoyant medium and herbalist who specializes mind-body- soul health, was approached by a literary agent.

“She saw my website, she read a bit about me and what I do,” Peoples explains. “She saw that I do workshops on women connecting with the sacred feminine and female empowerment and that sort of thing, and she said, ‘I want you to write a book on the Goddess.’ Which is awesome, because that is something that has been brewing within me for a long time.”

The next step in the puzzle was a conversation with musician, singer, writer and healer Alicia Mathewson, who will perform in the festival.

“She said, ‘It sounds to me that what you really want to do is a festival,’” Peoples recalls. “I was saying I want there to be musicians, and it would be great to have some dancers in the gallery, and that is how the event came together. And the more we got into it, people wondered, are men going to be involved? How are they going to be involved? It expanded to be about celebrating women in their many facets by also celebrating the wisdom and beauty of men and women coming together and the masculine-feminine synergy.”

Peoples describes the Goddess as a metaphor for women’s multiple facets and the many roles women play in today’s modern world. To Peoples, the goddesses of mythology and folklore from the ancient traditions of every global culture reflect the many aspects of today’s modern woman, from Celtic Brigid’s focus on hearth, home and nurturing to Athena’s focus on business, justice and keeping order. She has expanded these ideas in her photo series The Living Goddess, in which her female subjects embody the images of goddesses from traditions around the world.

“We can see the reflections of our many facets in these poetic stories,” Peoples says. “Women play so many roles today, as caretakers, career professionals, mothers, entrepreneurs, artists, teachers, listeners, counselors, friends, sisters, daughters, romantic partners, and we do it with grace, compassion, and love. The Cape Cod Goddess Festival celebrates women, summer’s end, and the magic created between men and women, and in a broader sense between the masculine and the feminine.”


Musicians at the event will include Boss Queens (R& B, hip hop, poetic female empowerment), Kim Mitchell (jazz vocalist), Yana Sorokina (blues and classical piano), Kathleen Healy (singer/songwriter), Alicia Mathewson (singer/songwriter), Daniel Ouellette and the Shobijin (crazy awesome rock), Sarah Burrill (acoustic rock ‘n’ roll), Molly Parmenter (singer/song writer), Nicolas Rideout (Ambient Trance genius) Joanna Meager and Danielle Ryder (acoustic guitar), Sarah Marchio (bag pipes), Hana Kahn (singer songwriter),Ashley Paige (singer songwriter) and Diana di Gioia (singer songwriter). Performances will be featured by Khadija’s Middle Eastern Dance Troupe Isis, Flamenco dance with Zoe, Raquel the Little One, Anahita Dance (belly dance solo), folk dance, Cape Cod African Dance and Drumming and Trevor the Juggler. Classes will be offered in yoga, movement therapy, herbal medicine, voice work, flamenco dancing, karate and more. An art show will showcase the works of Peoples, Richard Williams, Shannon McDonald, Ned Sonntag, Peggy Masce and Rebecca Burrill. Retail Therapy will offer jewelry, aromatherapy, green clothing, while other vendors will offer astrology, doula information and reiki. Kids’ activities will include dance, song, and fairy houses. All this plus fire spinning, theatrical readings, voice work, henna tattoos, healers and massage therapy adds up to an event with something for everyone, from Aphrodite to Zytniamatka (Germanic goddess of agriculture).


“This is a celebration of our community too, and local artists and families,” says Peoples. “Everyone can come and have a good time. Come on an empty stomach, eat some yummy food from Dancing Spoons and bask in the last real weekend of the summer.”

The first annual Cape Cod Goddess Festival takes place Saturday, Sept. 1 at noon until Sunday, Sept 2 at 7 p.m. at the Harwich Junior Theater Arts Center. Admission is $10 or $3 for children aged 5 to 12. For more information, call Pandora’s Garden at 310-591-6996, e-mail info@capecodgoddessfestival.com or visit capecodgoddessfestival.com.

My Interview with InsideOut Cape Cod


Excerpt from InsideOut Cape Cod article: "Oh My Goddess! It's the First-Ever Cape Cod Goddess Festival By: Elise Hugus, August 30, 2012 Cape Codders have two days and myriad ways to celebrate the goddesses in their lives over Labor Day weekend, with the first-ever Cape Cod Goddess Festival at the Harwich Junior Theatre Art Center. The brainchild of Dennis medium, herbalist and photographer Pandora Peoples, the festival is inteneded for all ages and genders “to celebrate the synergy where masculine and feminine energy unite.” With a full load of workshops, musical and dance performances from noon to 7 PM on September 1 and 2, the festival offers a taste of the many talents and alternative healing arts on Cape Cod, says Peoples. “It’s a wonderful celebration and sort of kaleidescope of talent, a bouquet of gifted performers here on Cape Cod,” she says. “I hope everyone can come down and inhale deeply the essence of the goddess.” READ MY INSIDE/OUT CAPE COD TODAY INTERVIEW HERE NOW

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Cape Cod Today Interview


Excerpt:

"Labor Day Weekend Festival Celebrates the Feminine in All of Us

By Cheryl Kain

Meeting Pandora Peoples is a multi-sensory experience. The meditation room is serene, almost like a tree house, looking out over woods and a lake. Sage is burning inside a big seashell, and the aroma of Jasmine tea wafts gently by. Pandora’s smile, complete with dimples, is high-wattage and welcoming.

We are drinking Pandora’s Saraswati Mood Lifter tea, with organic St. John's Wort, Kava Kava, and jasmine flowers. It has a delicious, minty taste. I am not usually partial to tea, but this tea is out-of-this-world. Pandora’s name means “All giving and all gifted” in Greek. Born and raised in Venice, California, her forward-thinking parents raised her celebrating Christmas, while focusing on Jesus as a healer, and Mary as a demi-Goddess...."

READ MY CAPE COD TODAY INTERVIEW HERE NOW

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Wicked Local Interview


Photo by Cheryl Kain. My interview today with Cheryl Kain from Cape Cod Today was deeply satisfying. It started with sage smudging and ended with a hug. I always love getting pertinent psychic information for folks when it behooves them. We enjoyed some Saraswati tea and I found out firsthand that she is a gifted singer. Interview with Elise Hugus of InsideOut Cape Cod was fun, perhaps I shed some light on the positive energy here out on the forearm. Hope it draws some artistic, holistic and multi-dimensional peeps from up Falmouth way.

Follow the link to read my interview with Candace Hammond of Wicked Local. Take note the Festival will be at the HJT Arts Center, not the HJT.

READ MY WICKED LOCAL INTERVIEW HERE NOW

Friday, August 24, 2012

Intoxicating Beauty in the Portal of Love


My interview with writer Jen Sexton from The Cape Cod Chronicle went great today. I get to enjoy another interview tomorrow, this time with writer Candace Hammond from the Cape Codder. Framing digital images in a world of mattes made for 8 x 10 photos is like brushing your teeth with tweezers, or cleaning your comb with a lighter. Dingy Magazine is covering the festival for an article in their next addition. Dancing Spoons is our provider of delicious local cuisine! It is the home of the best clam chowder, it will have you flying through the catacombs of the ancient world with the magical bliss of sensory overload.

The show is already conjuring the power of the feminine mystique, and those around me are turning into feline-like priestesses of ingenuity. I can see by the fire in their eyes, everything they touch has an alchemical reaction, blushing gold. As we hack through the humid jungle of discontent, our barefeet squishing through rich dark mud, trampling swollen ripe and fallen fruits, our fists sink under the weight of our offerings of twinkling jewels, with bundles of gorgeous green clothing (fit for queens) slung over our shoulders, ripping our biceps in the tropical heat, we approach the shrine of reverence for feminine wisdom and creative power.

Inside the Temple of Isis, to which we are transported by every great love, for what is love but a portal into the divine, we come upon the intoxicating rhythm of the belly dancers and mermaid chanteuses who heal us with their immortal song.

"Offering - Egyptian Goddess Ma'at" Photo by Pandora Peoples with Victoria Ariel Brown

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Goddess Festival Labor Day Weekend


Check out my link below... CAPE COD GODDESS FESTIVAL

This lovely event I am coordinating will feature phenomenal R&B/HipHop/Soul artists the Boss Queens, off-the-hook multilingual rockers Daniel Ouellette and the Shobijon, punkhorn The Goners, Middle Eastern Dance Troupe Isis, ambient and dance trance with Nicholas Rideout, singer songwriter Kathleen Healey, bluesy songtress Alicia Mathewson, acoustic rocker Sarah Burrill, folk artists Joanna Meager and Danielle Ryder, singer songwriter Jennifer Stratton, priestess-in-spirit Tara Murphy and her African drummers and dancers, child prodigy Raquel the Little One, Diana Anderson with a solo performance and Daughters of Moonlight Congo line, songbird Hana Kahn, hiphop artist Crystal, acoustic singer songwriter Molly Parameter, spoken word by Nicholas Rideout, flamenco with Zoe, folk dance with Keelia, dramatic readings by Jamie Horton and...free classes including yoga, mudras, voice work, movement therapy, herbal medicine for kids, bellydance, TCM What Elemental Goddess are you?, and more!!!

Art Show with myself, Shannon McDonald, Richard Williams, Becky Burrill, Ned Sonntag! Vendors! Raffle Sunday!

Kids activities and entertainment include Trevor the Juggler, face painting, henna tattoos, hiphop and karate classes, sing-a-longs, rhythm and movement, from poetry to song children's writer's workshop, and fairy house building.

$10 adults $3 kids.

Cape Cod Goddess Festival: Celebrating the sacred feminine and the pleasureful space where male and female energy meet and create synergy!

Saturday September 1st 12-7pm Sunday September 2nd 12-7pm

HJT Arts Center 265 Sisson Road, Harwich, MA

Thursday, August 09, 2012

Amaterasu Sun Goddess


Amaterasu is the Shinto Sun Goddess and creator of the universe, revered in both Japan and Korea. These are my photos of Amaterasu as portrayed by Izumi Hamagaki, drink formulator and designer.


Shinto Goddess Ukemochi


Here is Shinto Goddess Ukemochi, Japanese Goddess of agriculture, grains, and fertility, with Izumi Hamagaki. Ukemochi sews, fertilizes and pollinates the land with her essence.

Wednesday, August 08, 2012

Cape Cod Summer and Goddess Inari


Citronella candles, blazing logs in the fireplace, crescendos of burning sap crackling, the rhythmic honking of “geese” toads, the high-pitch pulse of pond-side locusts, the sweet taste of watermelon and cantaloupe sangria, breakfast, lunch and dinner al fresco on the wooden deck, salty lips, wild berries on the vines, tart plums on the wayside bush, large green grapes sprawling out on every tree, ripening in the summer heat, brisk swims by the cliffs, slow walks through the dunes to the mud hole…flashing smiles with friends around the fire, dancing flashlights of sleepy-eyed children, cackling laughter in the creek's strong current...make Cape Cod summers invigorating, lilting, heavenly.

Relishing my friend Izumi's visit. There is no better way to spend the summer than with out-of-town guests. It renews your appreciation for what you have, as if you need a reason to break out zingy Spanish wine, buffalo mozzerella, and your favorite eggplant and orange dal recipe. The first canoe trip into your backyard reveals the Loch Ness snapping turtle. A trip to the ice cream parlor by the old merchantile. The Brewster Store, is a candy and gift haven to tourists. To residents it is the midway point in a Spring parade, the home of caroling and hot cider on the house, a biking destination through the quiet backstreets.

What a pleasure to have long time friend Izumi Hamagaki, (designer, mixologist, entrepreneur), in from New York City before she moves back to Los Angeles. Here is Izumi and Inari, Japanese Goddess of sexuality and fertility. Inari is personified as a fox, god and goddess.

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

Mudflats


My friend took my son and I to discover some mudflats where a river meets the sea. Our kids had fun being carried and pulled along via boogie board against the tide. We gave ourselves a peat moss mud scrub, followed by some salty quartz-filled sand exfoliation. The texture of the mud is so playful and sticky, and the riverbed sand is quite captivating.

My next shoot is of Egyptian goddess Ma'at with radiant beauty Victoria. Ma'at means "wise one". She is the all-seeing eye whose manifestation predated The Eye of Horus and the Eye of Ra. Ma'at (thought to be pronounced Mu'at) is the Goddess of harmony, order and truth. Went to Wicked Thrift, the best vintage store this side of the Mississippi. Bought a cute red dress that zips up the front and an Egyptian Goddess necklace with lapis lazuli colored stone. Went to Joanne's fabrics for an ostrich feather and fabrics.

My long-time friend Izumi (designer, drink formulator, marketing director and gorgeous priestess-in-essence) is visiting from NYC in a couple of days. Inari is the Japanese Goddess of sexuality. Her name means "lady fox". Her Shinto and Buddhist temples are painted red and are all over Japan....Looks like there may be some mud involved.