Bees
8 lectures by Rudolf Steiner
Introduction by Gunther Hauk
With an essay on the Art of Joseph Beuys by David Adams
In his lectures
on Bees in 1923,
Rudolf Steiner predicted the dire state of the honeybee today.
He said that, within fifty to eighty years, we would see the
consequences of mechanizing the forces that had previously
operated organically in the beehive. Such practices include
breeding queen bees artificially.
The fact
that over sixty percent of the American honeybee population
has died during the past ten years, and that this trend is
continuing around the world, should make us aware of the
importance of the issues discussed in these lectures. Steiner
began this series of lectures on bees in response to a
question from an audience of workers at the Goetheanum.
From
physical depictions of the daily activities of bees to the
most elevated esoteric insights, these lectures describe the
unconscious wisdom of the beehive and its connection to our
experience of health, culture, and the cosmos.
Bees
is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding
the true nature of the honeybee, as well as those who wish to
heal the contemporary crisis of the beehive. This volume also
includes an essay by David Adams From Queen Bee to Social
Sculpture: The Artistic Alchemy of Joseph Beuys.
The art
and social philosophy of Joseph Beuys (1921–1986) is among
the most influential of the twentieth century. He was strongly
influenced by Rudolf Steiner's lectures on bees. The elemental
imagery and its relationship to human society played an
important role in Beuys's sculptures, drawings, installations,
and performance art. Adams' essay on Beuys adds a whole new
dimension to these lectures, generally considered to be
directed more specifically to biodynamic methods and
beekeeping.
Gunther
Hauk is director of the Pfeiffer Center, a biodynamic
research center sponsored by Threefold Educational Foundation
and Sunbridge College, Spring Valley, N.Y. He started a
training program in biodynamic gardening there in 1996. He has
worked with bees since 1975 and has been a beekeeper since
1980. He gives workshops throughout the United States on the
plight of the honey-bee.
David
Adams holds a PhD in art history education and has taught
art history at state universities and art schools for eight
years. He has written numerous published articles, essays, and
art exhibition booklets. He is currently an adjunct faculty in
art history at Sierra College, director of the Center for
Architecture & Design Research, and a freelance writer and
editor.
Trans: T. Braatz
8 lectures, Dornach 3 Feb to 22 Dec 1923, Prelude: GA348,
lectures: GA351
Anthroposophic Press
224pp; paperback; 13 b/w illustrations
ISBN: 0 88010 457 0
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Bees - Rudolf Steiner

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