Modern culture often prioritizes
efficiency over aesthetics. Federal and State policies actually dissuade
graduate schools from investing in campus grounds and landscapes.
Pacifica must continue to offer and value a ‘green’ campus environment,
with the beauty of its gardens, the sustainability of its organic
orchards, and animal-friendly plantings. The soul of place feeds the soul
of being… and learning.
~ Steve Aizenstat,
Founding President and Chancellor,
Pacifica Graduate
Institute
Dear Friends,
We would like to invite you to a special day at Pacifica Graduate
Institute’s Lambert Road Campus.
Celebrating the Soul of the World:
A Day in the Pacifica Gardens with Michael Sipiora and Marshall
Chrostowski will be held on Saturday, March 1
from 9:00 am-5:30 pm (see flyer below).
Experience the splendid grounds of Pacifica Graduate Institute’s Lambert
Road Campus as you are introduced to its internationally acclaimed
approach to psychology and myth. The result of more than 20 years of
thoughtful cultivation, the landscapes and other elements of the this
campus have gained renown for their beauty and for how well they support
the mission and values of the Institute. The 13-acre campus is the
preserved core of a much larger property developed by Max Fleischmann in
the 1920’s. It has evolved from an abandoned horse ranch into a unique
melding of Mediterranean gardens with native California flora and edible
landscapes that form a green belt around the campus. In addition to
applying the best horticultural and ecological principles, Pacifica has
re-introduced garden elements that reflect historical occupations on the
site, including ones honoring native Chumash villagers.
Join Landscape Manager (and 2013 Santa Barbara Independent Local
Hero) Marshall Chrostowski and Professor Michael Sipiora in an intense
aesthetic and intellectual engagement with a beautiful, inspirational
location. Accessible, conversational presentation of relevant themes from
Pacifica’s lecture hallsnotions of soulful engagement, poetic dwelling,
and the thought of the heartwill be interwoven with leisurely but
structured tours of the campus gardens. We will spend time focusing on
specific sites on the campus and the particular beauty of each location
by highlighting the horticultural, ecological, historical, and
psychological contexts in play. A healthful lunch will be provided by our
campus caterer utilizing food grown in the gardens. You will learn how
the Institute’s motto, Animae Mundi Colendae GratiaLatin “for the sake
of tending the soul of the world”is not just the directive for its
scholarly and professional pursuits; it has also guided the creation of
the incredible place that is Pacifica.
Michael P. Sipiora,
Ph.D., is core faculty at Pacifica where he
teaches in the Clinical Psychology, Depth Psychology, and Mythological
Studies programs. He holds graduate degrees in psychology and philosophy,
and has published in the areas of phenomenology and archetypal
psychology. Before coming to Pacifica, Michael was a professor at
Duquesne University in their Human Science Psychology program. He is a
licensed psychologist, practicing psychotherapist, and has been active in
narrative based organizational development consulting.
Marshall
Chrostowski is the land manager for both of
Pacifica Graduate Institute’s campuses. He holds advanced degrees in soil
science, plant, and tropical ecology, and ethnobotany. He originally came
to Pacifica in 1989 to renovate the long-abandoned grounds and orchards
at the future Lambert Road Campus. By 1993, under Marshall’s guidance,
several acres had been set aside for a demonstration mini-farm. Over the
next five years, it expanded to become a regular food source for student
dining services, the Pacifica community, and the greater Santa Barbara
area. The farm and orchards at Pacifica specialize in both advanced and
traditional organic growing practices. The staff teaches sustainable
farming and seed saving techniques to the interns and volunteers who aid
in cultivation and harvesting. Marshall was honored as a Local Hero in
2013 by the Santa Barbara Independent for his contributions to local
gardening, farming, and fundraising for the Santa Barbara Foodbank.
Space is limited. For more information and registration, see the attached
flyer, contact Pacifica Graduate Institute Public Programs Department at
805.969.3626, ext. 103 or
publicprograms@pacifica.edu
<
mailto:publicprograms@pacifica.edu> or visit our
website<
http://www.pacifica.edu/innercontent-m.aspx?id=8196>
atwww
.pacifica.edu/innercontent-m.aspx?id=8204
<
http://www.pacifica.edu/innercontent-m.aspx?id=8204>
Sincerely,
Public Programs Department
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Tel: 805.969.3626, ext.
103
Fax: 805.879.7392
publicprograms@pacifica.edu
<
mailto:publicprograms@pacifica.edu>
www.pacifica.edu
<
http://www.pacifica.edu/>
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
www.sbpermaculture.org
P
lPlease consider the
environment before printing this
email.