Nightwashers

~Tending to the Spiral Currents of Loss and Renewal~

We are a trio offering creative practices that explore death and transitional experiences. Inspired by mythic midnight washerwomen, we gather at the thresholds of life, opening space for loss and grief to be witnessed and potentially transformed through collective making, ritual, and reflection.

Drawing on animist principles, embedded in natural cycles, 

Voice, Somatics, Meditation,

We are interested in what happens when we stay with what is usually hidden: when we wash what has been marked as unclean, unspeakable, or too much. In a culture that isolates grief and sanitises death, we resist together by holding these experiences and washing away shame and silence. Not to resolve their pain and complexity or to provide closure, but to honour their weight and texture, and their capacity to connect us. To cultivate spaces where grief can move, take form, speak and be seen. 

Inspired by the women who stand at the threshold between worlds

Our name/identity/concept is inspired by European folkloric figures such as Les Lavandières and the Bean Nighe, women who appear by the river’s edge at night, washing the linens of those nearing death. These figures stand at the threshold between worlds, tending to what others turn away from. We gather in honour of that lineage, remembering hands in water and labours of care that tend to blood and cloth, breath and bone, with the understanding that this work is never clean, nor simple, and never separate from life itself. 

Reduced over time to superstitions and dark cautionary tales, the myths of the midnight washerwomen hold cultural memory, echoing a lineage of embodied, relational labour: washing, midwifing, holding vigil and keening, tending to the sick, the dying, the dead. Intimate, necessary, and often messy forms of care work have historically been feminised, marginalised, rendered invisible. Often feared or misunderstood because they engage directly with what is considered abject: the visceral realities of the body, decay, transformation, and loss.

Taking up this feminist legacy, we understand death and grief not as shameful or contaminating presences to be hidden or purified, but elemental processes requiring many hands and voices to hold them. Sacred experiences to be bathed in communal care, immersed in moonlight and sweet water. We return, again and again, to the waters where endings and beginnings meet.

Within rituals of intention, care, and reciprocity, we collectively bring forth our dead, our grief, our blood and tears to the shore, where the waters offer dissolution and renewal. We submerge with these presences, release them to the current, and resurface.

Rituals of Loss and Renewal

Our upcoming gatherings honoring transitions through art, ritual, and shared reflection.

Calling from the rivers’ edge

Date: 14.04.2026

Location: Ahorn, Hermanplatz

Voices as the river. 

A workshop for meeting, blending and exploring our voices in the depths of expression and collective care. 

An exploration and joining of our voices as a bridge between self, others, and the unseen. Across cultures and throughout history, people have gathered in sound, to call across distances, to grieve and be held in community, to tell stories that carry memory, and to invoke from beyond the visible world.

Amelie Journaling

Date:

Location:

Journaling