QUOTE(esoterica @ Mar 26 2009, 12:40 PM)
maybe a flimsy barrier of some sort could be used, after all room's walls are but a flimsy physical barrier
how about the sheet type thing they pull around a bed in the hospital, or a cubicle partition?
i assume your original floor is free from clutter and these things only line the walls, stepping over the viola on the way to the altar could present a distraction if nothing else
interesting object-possession possibilities aside, IMO it should be possible to develop some sort of false wall between the ritual and the mundane
Many thanks for your reply. As the circle is in the center of the room, partitioning this off would leave odd passageways filled with furnishings all around, and make the room somewhat unusable as the library and music room which it now also functions as. The circle area is free from clutter, as you assume. I do appreciate your suggestion - will post photos of the room at some point to more clearly illustrate.
QUOTE(Imperial Arts @ Mar 26 2009, 09:46 PM)
Very few of the older systems (The Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin, for example) require a room set aside for occult practices where all others are forbidden to enter and nothing else can occur. More commonly, you are required to go far away from civilization. Sometimes it is not specified, but rather obviously there are things to be done in private, and in these cases there are no rules given in regard to the use of the area outside the ceremonies.
The more modern systems (Eliphas Levi to the present) seem to depend more on the condition of the magician and/or preliminary invocations and purifications. Levi mentions some of his most potent work being done at the end of a hallway in someone else's house. Austin Spare is reported to have conjured "something" abominable on his dinner table, and that was well before TV dinners. Crowley bought a whole house explicitly for performing rituals, but by his own accounts his best works were done at a tourist attraction, in a hotel room, and while walking about in the desert.
Aside from living persons, the fantasy archetype of magicians is that of a person of great power whose home is almost always a total mess. Books, skulls, zoological artifacts, rocks, plants, equipment, and anything else can be imagined in the sanctuary of a wizard. Imagine Gargamel the magician in a clean house with a spare room for conjuring!
Unless you are making a devoted effort to work with a system that explicitly forbids intrusion, as I gather you are not, feel free to make your own regulations as to how you manage ritual space.
Thank you! Good advice and information, much appreciated, some of which I sensed in my gut bit wanted to hear from another.