Bucky in Bali

An Exhibtion of Buckminster Fuller’s Balinese Art Collection

Please join us in the Fuller Dome on Thursday, March 31st, 2022 at 7PM for an opening reception of “Bucky in Bali” - an art exhibition of Buckminster Fuller’s Balinese “Young Artist Movement” art collection.

A nice nice 3 x 4 ft example from Buckminster Fuller’s Balinese art Collection

Famed inventor and futurist, Buckminster Fuller was known for spending much of his time traveling around the globe giving lectures, inspiring young people and leading projects. He had been just about everywhere in his 87 years, of nearly perpetual travel, but the Indonesian island of Bali held a special place for him. On his extended trips to Bali, Bucky fell in love with the island-people’s culture and he became one of the leading collectors of Balinese artwork known as the “Young Artist Movement.” Bucky is often referenced as an important collector in current articles on the history of the Balinese “Young Artist Movement.” The Bali cultural history website, ubudnowandthen.com noted that, “The art of the Young Artists was mostly bought by expatriates and visiting foreigners who loved them. Each room of Bali’s very first five-star hotel, The Bali Beach Hotel in Sanur, was decorated with a Young Artist painting. Famous visitors to Bali, such as the famous science visionary Buckminster Fuller and renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead made collections of their work.”

Bucky’s Balinese art collection and his exceptional appreciation of Balinese cultural history grew out of his speculation that the ancient people of the Indonesian islands “were the original, planet-landed peoples.” In his 1981 book “Critical Path” Bucky writes, “we note that the island people were the original, planet-landed peoples who explored widely with their paddled canoes and gradually settled inland and upland, being able to cope with the mountain coldness because of their new animal-skin clothing and tents fashioned from the skins of wild animals that roamed into their peninsula-interbridged "islands" during the last ice age.” In “Critical Path” Fuller also uses a prominent Balinese architectural feature to support this thesis, ”the great architectural feature of Bali is that of the narrow vertical gap in the gateways of their walled-in dwelling compounds, a gap they explain as representing the gap that occurred long ago between once-united Bali and Java. This occurred only 30,000 years ago, when the last ice age began to melt away and its waters once again separated the islands. The Balinese architectural legend-supported memory thus goes back 30,000 years.”

Bucky’s important collection of Balinese “Young Artist Movement” paintings grew so large that he had no more wall space left to hang the paintings and the collection spent decades in storage. In 2020 Bucky’s daughter Allegra Fuller Snyder donated the collection to the Center for Spirituality and Sustainability for exhibition in the Fuller Dome Gallery. The world will now get to see this important collection in the Fuller Dome Gallery on the year’s 90th Day (3/31/22) on the planet’s 90th Meridian for an opening reception at 7:00 pm. for more information please call (618) 650-3246 or email fullerdome@outlook.com

What Would Maise Do?

The Charter for Compassion is hosting a discussion with Jacqueline Winspear

author of the Maise Dobbs series, Jaqueline Winspear

Jacqueline Winspear is the author of the wildly popular Maise Dobbs book series. Through seventeen books, the Maisie Dobbs series has had a resounding impact on fans. Readers have shared with author Jacqueline Winspear how Maisie’s stories have resonated with them or helped them through difficult times. Fans have been inspired by the heroine’s resilience and endurance, repurposing her strength in their own lives in a way perhaps best embodied by the phrase “What Would Maisie Do?” As members of the Charter for Compassion, we are inviting you this exciting program being offered by the charter. Join Jaqueline Windspear live online for a lively discussion. If you have read all seventeen of the Maisie Dobbs series, you will be engrossed in this conversation. If you haven't then you will be inspired to make Maisie a part of your future reading.

What Would Maisie Do? by Jaqueline Winspear

Date: Wednesday, March 16th at 9 am PST, Jacqueline Winspear (UK/USA)

Cost: Suggested donation $10 US.
Should this be beyond your reach, we’re happy to offer it to you free.

Agnes Pal Art Exhibition • Closing Reception Set For 2/25/22

The life of artist, holocaust survivor and SIUE alumni, Agnes Pal, is celebrated in this moving exhibition on view in the Fuller Dome Gallery.

SIUE University Museum Executive Curator, Erin Vigneau-Dimick speaking at the opening of the Agnes Pal art exhibition and memorial.

On Friday Feb. 25th at 6PM you are invited to attend a closing reception for the Agnes Pal art exhibition in the Fuller Dome.

Artist Agnes M. Pal, a native of Hungary and a Holocaust survivor, died at 85 years of age on Aug. 26th, 2021 in Glen Carbon, IL. A Celebration of Life and exhibition of Pal’s art opened in the Fuller Dome on Dec. 18th 2021 as an opportunity for Pal’s friends and family to honor her extaordinary life. Pal and her late husband, Alexander, relocated to Edwardsville in the 1970s when Alexander accepted a position as a math professor at SIUE. Pal, a former art director of a New York City advertising agency, found her creative outlet by pursuing graduate studies in the SIUE College of Arts and Sciences’ Department of Art and Design.

A highly celebrated metalsmith and sculptor, Pal’s work has been featured in numerous publications and exhibits. The Agnes Majtinszky Pal Collection, featuring more than 50 pieces of sculpture and fine art jewelry created by Pal, is displayed and cared for at the SIUE University Museum.

This closing reception will be the public’s last chance to see this incredible exhibition in the historic Fuller Dome. Please join us Friday, 2/25/22 from 6-8PM in the Fuller Dome, located on the SIUE campus, just off of circle drive, next to Visitor Parking Lot B.

"Revolutionary Love Is The Call Of Our Time..."

See No Stranger by Valarie Kaur

A Zoom Webinar with Valarie Kaur – renowned Sikh activist, filmmaker, and civil rights lawyer. Presented by the Charter for CompassionSee No Stranger is a practical guide to changing the world, a synthesis of wisdom, a chronicle of personal and communal history – all joined together by a story of awakening. Revolutionary love is medicine for our times. It just might be our best chance for our collective future.

Poster Art by Shepard Fairey

Webinar Date: Wednesday, February 9, 2022 at 10 a.m.
Pacific Time • Check your local times using this date/time converter.

Cost: Suggested donation $10 US. • Should this be beyond your reach, we’re happy to offer it to you free.

Bucky's Famous Dymaxion Car is Coming!

As part of the Fuller Dome’s on going 50th Anniversary Celebration, Jeff Lane of Lane Motor Museum, Nashville, is bringing the 1933 version of Buckminster Fuller’s famous, three-wheeled, Dymaxion car to the Fuller Dome on the SIUE Campus. The Dymaxion car will be at the dome from noon to 4PM on Friday 11/12/21. Come check out this incredible and historic vehicle patented by Buckminster Fuller in 1937.

YouTube Premiere of "Seeing the All in All ..."

In recognition of the Center for Spirituality and Sustainability’s annual Celebration of World Faiths, the Center submitted a 45 minute video presentation to the Parliament of World Religions. The Center’s video was streamed by the Parliament along with presentations from Dr. Jane Goodall, Prof. Wande Abimbola, Marianne Williamson, Richard Tarnas and His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama. It was also screened live in the Fuller Dome on 10/20/21. On Sunday 11/7/21, at 7PM Central Time, “Seeing the All in All…” is having a YouTube premiere. You will be able to watch it live on YouTube being at 7PM on 11/7 and join in the live chat discussion. In this video presentation, Center Director, Benjamin Lowder, draws connections between sacred geometry, Buckminster Fuller, hermeticism, Meister Eckhart, the perennial philosophy, alchemy, architecture, kabbalah, integrating polarities and dissolving boundaries. Lowder will be on hand for Q & A in the YouTube Premiere chat window.

Photos From the dome's 50th

Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville photographer, Howard Ash, was in the Fuller Dome on 10/22/21 to document these scenes from the dome’s 50th anniversary celebration.

50 Years to the Day, A Reading of Bucky's "Geoview"

10/22/21 Celebration in the Dome

On 10/22/71 Buckminster Fuller dedicated the miniature earth geodesic dome he and Shoji Sadao designed for the newly created Southern Illinois University campus in Edwardsville Illinois. Bucky read an essay that day in 1971 to dedicate the building. The essay is titled “Geoview” and it describes Fuller’s vision and intention for the creation of his Edwardsville dome. 50 years to the day, on 10/22/21, Bucky’s family and supporters came together for a 50th anniversary reading of his “ Geoview” essay. Bucky’s language is verbose but when examined, it is revealed to be exactly constructed to convey the meaning he had intended it to communicate. Get inside the mind of Buckminster Fuller and enjoy this 50th Aniiversary reading of “Geoview” :

A 50th Anniversary reading of Buckminster Fuller's "Geoview" essay, originally read by Bucky for the 1971 dedication of his Religious Center, miniature-earth, "Geoscope" dome built on the SIUE campus. "Geoview" is read here on 10/22/21 (50 years from the day Bucky read it) by Bucky's grandson Jaime Snyder, his granddaughter Alexandra Snyder May, Bucky scholar David McConville, Bucky's colleague Amy Edmondson, Bucky devotee Benjamin Lowder, Bucky's niece Lucilla Fuller Marvel, and author of the Bucky play D. W. Jacobs. Today the Center is known as the Fuller Dome and it is managed by a nonprofit org. the Center for Spirituality & Sustainability.

Fuller Dome 50th Anniversary Celebration

Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Fuller Dome with dance, music, art, architecture, and artifacts expressing the dome's history

Friday, October 22nd, 2021, marks the 50th anniversary of the day that Buckminster Fuller dedicated his dome on the SIUE campus by reading his essay "Geoview." The Center for Spirituality and Sustainability would like to mark the Fuller Dome's 50th anniversary by inviting you to join us in the dome for an evening celebrating its history while looking to its future. The evening starts at 6PM with program comprised of:

  • A reading of "Geoview" by Fuller's, family, friends, colleges & devotees

  • A dance tribute from the Katherine Dunham Dance Troupe

  • An exhibition of art and artifacts donated from the Fuller Estate

  • Plus, live string and piano music from the SIUE music department

The 50th Anniversary Exhibition opens in the Fuller Dome Gallery at 7:30 PM following the program

On October 22nd in 1971, Buckminster Fuller and Shoji Sadao dedicated the geodesic domed Religious Center that they had designed and built together for the newly created Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville Campus. At the dome that day, Bucky read an essay he had written for the occasion. The essay is titled "Geoview, Go In To Go Out" and it describes Bucky's intention for the Center's design as well as the Center's connection to our planet's 90th longitudinal Meridian. The Center is topped by a translucent, three-quarter-sphere, miniature-earth, geodesic dome that perfectly straddles the planet's 90th Meridian. Bucky was able to align the miniature-earth dome's 90th Meridian with the actual 90th Meridian so that when you stand in the center of the dome and look up, you are looking at the place that you are standing on the actual planet. In doing this, you see your place in the world from vantage point of the heart of the planet, and since the miniature-earth dome is translucent, you look out to the heavens and see the world's place in the universe. Providing this immediate sense orientation of the human individual with-in the universe is a remarkable architectural achievement and the Center is in many ways Bucky's master work. Today the Center is named the Fuller Dome and it is managed by a non-profit organization, the Center for Spirituality and Sustainability.

Our Board President, Connie Frey Spurlock, is Building Community

SIUE Successful Communities Collaborative Helps Revitalize Venice, Brooklyn and Madison Townships

Republished from the SIUE News:

L-R: Helping  to lead up the Brooklyn group are SIUC graduate students Alex Grenhoff  and Abigail Frankel, and SSCC graduate assistant Breanna Booker  (seated).

L-R: Helping to lead up the Brooklyn group are SIUC graduate students Alex Grenhoff and Abigail Frankel, and SSCC graduate assistant Breanna Booker (seated).

The problems are longstanding, but the mission is clear. The current situation is bleak, but the commitment to the future is hopeful. The resources are threadbare, but the partnerships are secure. After decades of historical disinvestment and systematic disparities, the Illinois communities of Venice, Brooklyn and Madison (VBM) are targeted to be the recipients of community and economic development, thanks in part to the Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Successful Communities Collaborative (SSCC)

The SSCC, along with Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC), SIU Board of Trustees Vice Chair Ed Hightower, EdD, Madison County Leadership Council, and Western Illinois University (WIU) with Innovation Network’s (IIN) Sustaining Illinois Seed Funding, is engaged in community-led strategic planning to revive and set in motion a prosperous design for VBM. Other challenges that the communities face include the deindustrialization that led to rapid population decline. The collaborative team has hosted two community planning workshops that included community leaders, regional architects and planners, environmental and disaster assessment experts, economic advisors and university representatives. 

Connie  Frey Spurlock, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Sociology  and SSCC director (left) and Ed Hightower, EdD, SIU Board of Trustees  vice chair. 

Connie Frey Spurlock, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Sociology and SSCC director (left) and Ed Hightower, EdD, SIU Board of Trustees vice chair. 

Leading teams of graduate students on strategic planning and design development proposals are SIUC School of Architecture Professors Craig Anz, PhD; and Rolando Gonzales, PhD. The proposals include a focus on flood prevention methods, such as rain gardens, storage tanks and additional greenery. “This work aligns with our School of Architecture mission to serve our communities,” said Anz, “to better our greater socio-environmental conditions, and prepare future architects to make real-world impacts in the 21st century.” 

Connie Frey Spurlock, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Sociology and SSCC director, and Breanna Booker, SSCC graduate assistant, are researching and documenting social and economic aspects needed to inform the overall project and directly engage community members in the planning. “We are working to put the needs of the community first, by developing plans centering around the people who live there,” explained Booker. “The community members are going to be part of every step of the process, and I am looking forward to seeing what they have in mind.” WIU faculty are working with community leaders and stakeholders to build local grocery facilities in the Venice township, in correspondence with strategic planning proposals. 

“The VBM project is an extremely exciting one and is like no other I have worked on before,” said Sean Park, WIU program manager  and outreach specialist. “With improvements planned in housing, food access, job training, transportation access and other areas, the possibility of improving the quality of life increases greatly.” The project involves site visits, community workshops, architectural design sessions and presentations to leaders and stakeholders. The proposals will include township and neighborhood layouts with new community facilities and amenities, and proposed environmental resilient development. 

For more information visit siucarchitecture.wixsite.com/siu-community

SIUE Successful Communities Collaborative (SSCC) is a cross-disciplinary program that supports one-year partnerships between the University and communities in Illinois to advance local resilience and sustainability based on community-identified environmental, social and economic issues and needs. Our mission is to connect Illinois communities with the dynamic resources of SIUE students and faculty.  

Center Hosts Indigenous Knowledge & Sustainability

The Center for Spirituality and Sustainability dome is honored to be one of the host sites for the 2021 Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainability Conference. The conference seeks to highlight indigenous life-ways related to sourcing food in balance with local ecosystems. Our Center’s Advisory Board Member and Distinguished SIUE Professor, Gregory Fields organized the 2021 IKS Conference so that we may recall ways of living in alignment with the ecosystem that supports us. The conference is free and open to all online with registration and schedule information below. The Center is hosting Ed Spevak’s presentation titled “Native Foods, Native Peoples, Native Pollinators.” Register today to join us online for this important sharing of knowledge vital to a sustainable future for our species.

Pollinators flyer top web.jpg
Pollinators flyer bottom web.jpg

Listed below is the complete 2021 IKS Conference schedule:

IKS Flyer 5 2021.jpg

Remembering Allegra Fuller Snyder

ALLEGRA FULLER SNYDER • August 28, 1927 - July 11, 2021

We are mourning the passing of Allegra Fuller Snyder. Her family shared with us that Allegra passed on Sunday, July 11th with the same ease and grace that she lived her life. Allegra was a dancer, UCLA professor, dance ethnologist, choreographer, and author. She shared her joy and enthusiasm for life through her love of dance. Allegra was the daughter of our building's designer Buckminster Fuller. We are forever grateful to the support and generosity she has shown to the Center for Spirituality and Sustainability over the years. Allegra’s support of the Center accounts in large part for our organizations vitality. Our prayers are with her children Jaime and Alexandra as well as the rest of her family as they navigate her passing.

The following memoriam was written by Allegra’s family upon her passing:

Allegra Snyder, professor emerita and former chair of the Department of Dance at UCLA, and a founder of the Buckminster Fuller Institute, died July 11 at her apartment in Stroudwater Lodge, Westbrook, Maine, at the age of 93. The daughter of R. Buckminster Fuller and Anne Hewlett Fuller, Allegra was born in Chicago. Her primary education was at the Dalton School in New York City, a learning experience that she cherished. On graduation day from Bennington College in 1951, Allegra married Robert Snyder, who had recently won the Academy Award Oscar for Best Feature Documentary in 1950 for his film on Michelangelo. Allegra attended the School of American Ballet and studied with Martha Graham during her years at Bennington. 

After the birth of her two children, Alexandra Fuller Snyder and Jaime Lawrence Snyder, Allegra and Bob drove west to Los Angeles. With her children in school, Allegra enrolled at UCLA, earning a Master’s in Dance in 1967 and then joined the faculty there. She retired from UCLA in 1991. During her long career at UCLA, Allegra developed many curriculum innovations concerning dance, ethnography, culture, and art. In addition to serving as chair of the Dept. of Dance at UCLA, Allegra directed the World Arts and Cultures interdisciplinary program which became the Dept. of World Arts and Cultures/Dance in 1995. She researched and lectured widely around the world including a year in England on a Fulbright Grant and a year in Kerala, India, on a sabbatical. 

She was long-active with the Congress on Research in Dance (CORD) and the National Endowment of Arts, dance division. Snyder was a visiting professor of performance studies at New York University from 1982-83 and was honorary visiting professor at the University of Surrey, Guildford, England from 1983-84. She also taught at CalArts and at Naropa Institute.

Following the death of her father, Buckminster Fuller, in 1983, Allegra took a significant role in determining a path to preserve her father’s work and to find ways to promote its relevance going forward. She was a passionate and articulate educator on the principles of her father’s work and encouraged many to think independently and follow their unique experience in life. 

Allegra enjoyed and took a keen interest in the growth of her two grandchildren, Olivia Allegra May and Rowan Keith May, and of her two step grandchildren, Mira Kennedy and Elizabeth Demaray.Allegra’s husband, Robert Snyder, died in 2004. After 55 years in Southern California, Allegra packed up her bags and moved back home to NYC. She spent eight years living in Murray Hill fully engaged in New York dance and other arts, as well as reconnecting with life-long friends and family. Throughout her life she spent many summers in Penobscot Bay, Maine, on Bear Island, which will be her final resting place.

Stories'n Stones: Cahokia's Woodhenge

Marilyn and Larry Kinsella return to the Fuller Dome on Saturday, July 24th at 7PM to share stories and ancient tools relating to the creation of Woodhenge at the Cahokia Mounds historic site near Collinsville Illinois. Woodhenge is an ancient solar calendar comprised of a large circle of cedar poles that were likely used to site Solstice and Equinox alignments.

Larry Kinsella is an ancient tool expert and he worked on the reconstruction of Woodhenge. He will talk about the stone tools he made and used to keep the reconstruction of Woodhenge as near to genuine as possible. Marilyn Kinsella is a gifted and renowned storyteller who will be sharing stories relevant to Woodhenge's theme of capturing the light and fire of the sun. We hope to see you in the dome on Saturday, July 24th for this exciting event. The Fuller Dome is located on the SIUE campus, just off of Circle Drive, next to Visitor Parking Lot B.

Searching for the Sacred with Paul Coutinho

Join the C.S.S. online for this engaging series as we Search for the Sacred with author Paul Coutinho on the 2nd Sundays of June, July, and August.

In this 3-part series we will be Searching for the Sacred through Islamic Mysticism on June 13th, Living in the Sacred through Ignatian Spirituality on July 11th and reflecting on our relationship with the sacred through Cognitive Behavior Therapy on August 8th.

This is on online event hosted through Zoom. The reservation ticket is $30 and includes $20 donation to Paul and a $10 donation to the CSS. Upon registering you will be given access to a zoom link to watch this inspiring series with author Paul Coutinho.

 Please join us on Second Sundays at 7 pm to meditate and reflect with internationally renowned author and speaker Paul Coutinho, PhD. Inspired by Ignatian spirituality, Eastern spirituality, and Western psychology, Paul’s books include "How Big is Your God", "Just as You Are," and "Sacred Darkness."