Loss is a normal part of lived experience.

The Grammar of Grief Handbook is a living online resource for people seeking performance practices which can help them work through losses in their lives.

Memorials are typically thought of as stone structures rising above eye level in a public square. The Handbook reimagines bereavement through writing, audio, or physical movement that can be created at home and come out of the body’s unique relationship to grief.

Indira Allegra would like to acknowledge the contribution of Temple Contemporary at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture at Temple University with participants from the Fabric Workshop Museum and engagements with the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design at Indiana University, and Oxbow School of Art and Artists Residency in 2020 and 2021.

The Grammar of Grief Series began as a commission from the San Francisco Chronicle and is generously hosted by Temple Contemporary at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Invaluable support for the online Handbook from the Minnesota Street Project Adjacent Virtual Residency in San Francisco, California.


Indira Allegra

Indira Allegra’s work re-imagines memorial as a genre vital for life for its ability to hold the tension which grief creates inside ourselves, within crafted objects, spaces and rituals. Allegra is deeply informed by Quiet, the inner life of people, places and things, and the ritual, relational and performative aspects of weaving.

They are a YBCA 100 Honoree, 2019/2020 Burke Prize Winner, Eureka Fellow, Lucas Artist Fellow and California Black Voices Grantee.

@indiraallegra
indiraallegra.com


Minnesota Street Project Adjacent

Adjacent is a space where art happens online. Collaborating with galleries, creators, and partners around the world, the site showcases virtual talks, live performances, and more.

Adjacent is a direct response to the 2020 pandemic, re-imagining and re-contextualizing the Arts in this new reality. The site is an extension of the Minnesota Street Project’s physical space in San Francisco — breaking boundaries, inspiring curiosity, and championing conversations about the Arts.

minnesotastreetprojectadjacent.com
@minnesotastreetproject


Design and development by @paperbeatsscissors
Handbook maintenance by Shanna Sordahl

Submit a Practice

Your loss is worthy of memorial. Your practice of memorial can be a resource for others experiencing the same kind of loss. Look to the website for inspiration, then create your own sound-based, movement or written practice or practice in your environment which comes out of your own experience of grief for others to try.

Submit your own practices and prompts anytime. The Grammar of Grief Handbook selects and publishes new submissions four times a year. Please note that the Grammar of Grief Handbook does not seek original poetry, song or movement about loss – but rather written, movement, sound based practices which have worked for you to process your loss, which people experiencing similar losses can try on their own. Submit here.























Touch your face, then torso. Look up, down. Drop to your knees. Slap the floor. Cup something in your hands. Let it spill out. Clap hands together. Undulate, arms stretched behind. Let your head fall back. Offer your body home.

Image Description: Yiyi dances on the left side of the screen in a shadowy, full living room between a couch and a coffee table. Erin dances on the right in front of an open doorway between large pieces of wood and cardboard and a metal filing cabinet. Yiyi wears a sweater with thick stripes and loose fitting orange pants. Erin wears a pink sweater and tan pants.

Cradling water/ Cradled by water/ Coldness, flows through my fingers/ moving on to its next location, nurturing the next life.

Yiyi Wei is an interdisciplinary artist who considers her artworks as processes that perceive the entangled connections between a network of human and non-human existences.

e-e-wei.com
@prunt_machine

Try this movement practice with your own body and notice how you feel. Submit a movement practice which comes out of your own experience of grieving loss that other people can try.