WMC News & Features

Ancient Texts of Everyday Secrets

Jewliaeisenberg

Arts commentator Emily Wilson talked to singer and composer Jewlia Eisenberg about her latest installation in San Francisco, a project that brings to life the ancient, secret writings of women in what is now Iraq.

At the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in downtown San Francisco, some people are gathered in a double vaulted dome, sitting on colorful pillows, waiting for a performance to begin. Visitors are invited to whisper secrets anonymously. Then recordings of those secrets play inside the dome.

All of this—the dome, the performance, the secrets—are part of the latest project from Jewlia Eisenberg, founder of the music group Charming Hostess. Eisenberg looks for text that interests her to set to music. That has included Bosnian resistance poetry (Sarajevo Blues) and the diaries of Marxist theorist Walter Benjamin (Trilectic). With her latest album, The Bowls Project: Secrets of the Apocalyptic Intimate, Eisenberg used the text from Jewish Babylonian amulets, in the shape of bowls.

Residents of 4th to 8th century Babylon (the area that is now Iraq) buried the bowls in the entrances to their homes.

Eisenberg found the text while in the office of a former teacher and friend, Daniel Boyarin, a Talmudist and professor at the University of California at Berkeley.

“The font was really bad, which is why I pulled it down,” she said. “The title was Corpus of the Aramaic Incantation Bowls, and it was somebody’s dissertation from 1973—what could be more dry, right?”

But Eisenberg found the amulets far from dry, as they exhorted demons and angels to block monsters, bring strength, and curse enemies.

These bowls come from the time of the Babylonian Talmud, which Eisenberg says is at the core of Jewish life, explicating the Bible. The Talmud does not overflow with the female voice, and Eisenberg says what drew her about the text was hearing from women from that time.

“You get a lot of voices from women very specifically and very personally,” Eisenberg said. “They are secrets about their sexuality, their home, their work, and taking care of their bodies, including menstruation and miscarriage.”

When Eisenberg asked Boyarin to read the Aramaic for her so she’d know how to pronounce it, she saw he was having difficulty with some words.

“This man does not stumble over Aramaic,” she said. “It’s his bread and butter. I asked, ‘What was that word?’ and he said, ‘It’s the we form for women.’ It doesn’t appear once in the Talmud. It appears all the time in the bowls.”

In the text of the bowls, everyday concerns run smack up against supernatural forces, Eisenberg says. She calls this the ‘apocalyptic intimate,’ and she says it exists in American songs as well, what rock critic Greil Marcus calls “that old, weird music.” On the album, Eisenberg has included these types of songs as well, such as “Early in the Morning,” which includes the lyrics, “Some people say the Devil is dead/I saw the Devil at the foot of my bed.”

Eisenberg hopes people going to see the installation and hearing the songs will see the connection between their lives and the women who wrote the text on the bowls.

(Photo by Rien van Rijthoven.)

“When I first started thinking about this project, we were very deep in Iraq, but unless you have family fighting in Iraq, most people were not thinking about it,” she said. “With the text here, you can’t help but identify with these Iraqi women from 1,500 years ago. They’re not even that different from you, so how about women who live there now?”

Eisenberg knew right away she wanted to make an installation with this project, rather than just recording a CD.

“I wanted people to see the text and engage with it,” she says. “So people know when I say stuff like, ‘I am standing at the shore of the sea and I adjure you great bird of rivers that you may hear my words and accept my incantation,’ I am not making this up. That’s directly from the bowls, and yes, Jews talked about god as the great bird of rivers. It’s not some fuzzy wuzzy thing or my own feminist manifestation.”

Eisenberg looked for a while for someone who could create an installation to go along with her music. She found that person, architect Michael Ramage, while she was a visiting artist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She wanted to have a space where people could go and engage with the text, she says, and she wanted that space to be shaped something like a bowl and be welcoming.

That’s how it was for Ella Washington, one of the people sitting inside the dome at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Washington, who is visiting San Francisco from Atlanta, was on her way to another performance, when she saw the dome and was drawn in.

“The structure feels very sacred, the cloth feels very Mediterranean, and everything about it is so feminine,” she said. “I don’t know, I just feel good in here.”



More articles by Category: International
More articles by Tag:
SHARE

[SHARE]

Article.DirectLink

Contributor
Categories
Sign up for our Newsletter

Learn more about topics like these by signing up for Women’s Media Center’s newsletter.