body actualized center
neighborhood: bushwick | space type: community space, yoga studio | active since: 2011 | links: website, facebook, twitter
Body Actualized Center for Cosmic Living is a new space in Bushwick that has quickly gained a lot of acclaim. A former iron foundry (and before that, briefly, a chicken slaughterhouse!), Body Actualized is now a beautiful, welcoming space with reclaimed-wood floors, a wall of windows, candles and incense, and cushions stacked along the walls. By day it’s a yoga studio offering hatha, vinyasa, and prana yoga, as well as rejuvenation classes, qi-yo workshops, new moon and full moon ceremonies, shamanic astrology, and more. By night it’s a venue for electronic music performances and “chill-out” parties.
Run by a loose collective of musicians, artists, and promoters—several of whom make up Vibes Management—Body Actualized is also known for weekly Cosmic Yoga, which is yoga with live ambient electronic music, and promoting “Healthy Hedonism”: a lifestyle reflected in organic food, community empowerment, consciousness raising, creative opportunities, and spiritual growth. You should obviously sign up for a yoga class, but first read my interview with Brian, one of the founding members.
brooklyn spaces: Did the collective exist
before the space, or did the space come first?
brian: Body Actualized has been a group as
well as a brand for about three years, since way before we got this space. We
throw DJ parties with a cosmic aesthetic, and we did Cosmic Yoga on the roof of
the Market
Hotel for years. When we found this space we were excited to be able to
have our own venue, but slowly it dawned on us that we didn’t want to do just a
venue, so we decided to have yoga during the day. The three of us who signed the
lease didn’t want to be the only ones doing things, so we called all our friends
and said, “Hey guys, we’ve got something really special.” We started having
meetings, and whoever kept coming back ended up being part of the founding
collective.
brooklyn spaces: Is the collective consensus
based?
brian: Yes. Non-hierarchical, consensus
based. The one rule is that no one should do anything they don’t want to do, and
that way everyone can be happy. We’re more a group of friends with a vision than
a business. Having a commitment to radical honesty is really important. Everyone
can say whatever they’re feeling, because it’s based in love, and thriving on
love comes from mutual understanding.
brooklyn spaces: How do you crystallize the
vision or mission of the space?
brian: Right now, it’s not crystallized.
We’re just doing what we do. Everyone kind of gets it, but no one can put it
into words. We all know what’s appropriate for the space and what falls under
the purview of our vibe.
brooklyn spaces: Are you guys all into yoga?
Are you the yoga teachers?
brian: There are three yoga teachers in the
core group, but everyone is into yoga as a way of life. I mean, it’s not some
sort of didactic thing; there’s no rules. If someone doesn’t like yoga for a
little while, that’s okay; yoga is just a small facet of a larger vibe and
intention, just one core element in galvanizing the overall energy of what we’re
doing in the larger picture.
brooklyn spaces: Tell me about some of the
events.
brian: They’re mostly centered around
electronic music. There’s very few guitars; I think there’s only twice been a
drum set used in the space. The music plays a huge part in determining the
aesthetic of an environment. There’s a whole range of styles within electronic
music, and we curate them specifically to hone in on a certain vibe, just like
someone would curate an art show. Everything is working on a very subtle level
to open the space, to open the pathways for someone’s mind to travel to a
different region.
brooklyn spaces: When I came to my first
show here and there were all the cushions on the floor, it was very affecting.
It really changes the way you interact with and experience the space.
brian: Yeah, it’s important for them to be
“chill-out” parties, because people will feel free. If someone comes here alone,
they can still be comfortable, whereas when you go to a bar or a warehouse
party, it feels and looks weird to be alone. Here, you could be laying down
asleep in the corner, and no one would even take a second glance. It’s like
positive nightlife. You’re in an environment that’s clean, a clean welcoming
wood floor. No chemicals are used to clean the space; it’s sanitary in its own
way. And most people take their shoes off when they come in, which changes the
mindset of everyone in the room. When you have your shoes off, you let down your
guard, you feel more vulnerable, you feel like you’re at home. This space is
kind of an oasis, one that’s much needed in this very hard and often distracted,
isolating city. There’s a social barrier in most public places that doesn’t
really exist here.
brooklyn spaces: It must attract really
interesting people.
brian: Yeah, all sorts of people who think
about the world in ways they were not taught in high school. We have both
artistic and mystic people come through, people who practice reiki or the use of
subtle energies, people who are interested in tarot cards, in astrology. It’s
not a party atmosphere; it’s a place for people to come together over a
different energy.
brooklyn spaces: How do you feel about being
in Bushwick right now? Do you have a relationship with some of the other
innovative spaces around here?
brian: Bushwick is just paradise right now,
I can’t say enough positive things about it. People are really friendly, energy
is high, there’s a lot of great stuff popping up. Secret Project Robot is really cool, the new Silent Barn is going to be in Bushwick. Everything is
ending up here. And we get a pretty cool racial diversity at Body Actualized, on
top of all the other types of diversity. That feels good.
brooklyn spaces: What are your goals for the
future of the space?
brian: About fifteen times as many plants,
like a beautiful jungle. Ambient, indirect lighting. Permanent installations
that make people think differently about the world through technology.
Everything about the space has to be something that no one is doing. Every
element has to be an original concept. By doing unique things we can open people
up to new possibilities.
brooklyn spaces: Are there specific artists
you’re hoping to bring in?
brian: Oh, yeah. We have like two hundred
artists we’d like to have here. We’ve already had some incredible shows. Franco Falsini
just played. For one of our first big shows we had Iasos, one of the founders of New Age music,
who has never played in New York City before. That set a great tone and
precedent for the music community worldwide. So when I email someone, they’re
like, “Oh yeah, I know about that place.” I just emailed Maria Minerva, an amazing
Estonian artist, and she was like, “Yeah, I know about the Center.” The sky’s
the limit. You can do anything in this world.
***
Like this? Read about more community spaces: Trees Not Trash, Time’s Up, Trinity Project, Bushwick City Farm