Coffee, But Not Really Coffee – Mayumi Nakazaki x Monali Meher

Coffee, But Not Really Coffee is a participatory event that uses personal coffee rituals as a gentle way to explore inclusivity, individuality, and cultural encounter. Instead of one “correct” coffee, everyone is invited to prepare their version whatever “coffee” means to them.

That could be: spiced brews, instant mixes, decaf, chicory coffee, mushroom coffee, Postum, chai and coffee fusions, herbal alternatives, experimental blends made for this occasion, or even coffee reading. Each cup becomes a small self-portrait as an everyday ritual that carries memory, identity, and choice.

This project is created by Mayumi Nakazaki and Monali Meher.

How it works

A table/bar will be set up with materials and space for participants to make their preferred drink. You can:

  • prepare your own “coffee (or not-coffee)”

  • chat with strangers about what you’re making and why

  • or simply enjoy the atmosphere quietly

As the room fills with different aromas and methods, the gathering becomes a collective performance: individual habits forming a shared space of hospitality and reflection.

Throughout the event, we’ll also screen art-house film fragments featuring curious coffee moments.

Why coffee?

Coffee can be comfort, routine, status, survival, heritage, or simply a way to pause. In many cultures, preparation is communal, an invitation to sit, share time, and witness one another. Here, coffee becomes a tool to meet the “other”: another person, another background, another way of living. To use the ordinary act of making a drink to create an intimate, contemporary space for exchange; inviting participants to slow down, encounter one another, and consider how everyday rituals shape belonging.

Coffee, But Not Really Coffee revisits their 2004 project titled Tea Ceremony, where neighbors from Asylum Seeker’s Center, Bos en Lommer Amsterdam were invited for tea. Participants, strangers from different nationalities, shared how tea or coffee is served in their home countries. The point wasn’t only to drink together, but to practice hospitality through giving and receiving. By paying attention to everyone’s tea, we became more aware of our own histories and assumptions.

More than 20 years later, these questions feel more urgent than ever to Mayumi Nakazaki x Monali Meher: what can art do amid today’s social challenges, and how do we live inside the tension between belonging and being ourselves?

The capacity is limited for the experience of the event.

Souls of Zen: A Shared Ritual

Droog presents an immersive afternoon bringing together ritual food experience and ethnographic cinema.

At the center of the gathering is a screening of Souls of Zen, accompanied by a live sushi-making ritual and shared tasting experience by ASA Vegan Sushi.

Guests are invited not only to watch and eat, but to observe allowing food, gesture, sound, and image to unfold together in time. This event is a joint project by culinary artist Asako Kato (ASA Vegan Sushi) and film curator Alya Yumrukçal (Droog).

The ritual of making and eating
The sushi is prepared live as part of the shared experience. Guests are invited to enter the world of the film slowly and to engage with the food attentively during the screening.

Each guest receives four pieces of vegan sushi:
• Three pieces of Asako’s signature sushi
• One mini onigiri

These are enjoyed during the screening, creating a shared moment that reflects Zen not as a formal religious practice, but as a lived philosophy present in everyday gestures, intention, and attention.

About ASA Vegan Sushi
Through ASA Vegan Sushi, Asako Kato explores sushi not only as food, but as an embodiment of Japanese philosophy — living in harmony with nature and seeking the intrinsic beauty of each element.

The film: Souls of Zen
Souls of Zen (2011) Buddhism, Ancestors, and the 2011 Tsunami in Japan is a documentary based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the aftermath of the 3/11 disasters. Filmed by Tim Graf and Jakob Montrasio, the film follows Buddhist clergy and communities as they navigate ritual, mourning, and collective recovery in the wake of catastrophe.

A short Q&A with the film’s director will follow the screening, offering space for reflection and exchange.

 

Information
Date: 21 March
Time: 3:00 PM

Ticket price includes four pieces of vegan sushi.
Drinks will be available for purchase, including tea and low-alcohol pairing options.

Capacity is limited to preserve the intimacy of the experience.

Photo credits: Elmer Driessen, An De Smedt

What lives under our skin

An immersive dance performance where the boundary between performer and audience becomes thin, fluid, almost invisible.
Here, the body listens before it speaks.
Movement rises from sensation — from what vibrates beneath the skin — rather than from imposed form.
Dancing from how we feel in the moment becomes an empowering act: a way to reclaim the body, to trust the senses and to let emotion move freely.
A celebration of who we are,
in our highs and our lows,
opening a shared space of presence, vulnerability, uplift and embodied connection.
Our instagram : @the_kosmonauts
Photos by Seraina Wams
Doors Open: 19:30
Show Start: 20:15
Show End: 21:15