The Sociodrama in Villa Piccolomini was part of a series of events and exhibitions in honor of the Parents Circle, realized by Nicoletta Gaida, director of the Dionysia Center. In this context, the italian chef Igles Corelli organized a big 'dinner for peace'. This dinner and its preparation inspired the documentary 'Feed the Peace' by Tiziano Novelli, Silvia Giulietti and Patrizia Fregonese (duration 55 min. Italy 2007). It is the story of a journey, through food, in two worlds in conflict: Israel and Palestine. Two cooks, a Palestinian, Hatem Taha and a famous Israeli chef, Erez Komarovski, told in their cities, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
Silvia Giulietti created for Plays the unique official video of the Parents Circle socioplay, also editing the shooting of the troupe of Andrea Paciotto that had been called by Moreno Cerquetelli. Anyway Plays refused any other use of sequences and even photographs of the Parents Circle sociodrama. Rosati turned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and threatened a legal action in order to avoid any quotation of sociodrama in a context that was not clinic or psychodramatic.
After the stressing conflicts about the video, Rosati had a strange reaction. For a whole month he worked on an architectural installation that was a "psychomagic" in the sense of Alejandro Jodorowsky. Into the walls of his study he inserted a hundred hand-cut crystal slabs that formed the trigrams of the I-Ching's oracle by passing light from one side to the other of the walls.
After installing the crystals in the wall of the studio, Rosati edited a second video of the Parent' Circle sociodrama with the 8 trigrams that form the 64 Hexagrams at the base of the I-Ching divination book (LI: Trigram of Fire - KUN: Trigram of the Earth - TUI: Trigram of the Lake - CHIEN: Trigram of Heaven - KAN: Trigram of Water - KEN: Trigram of the Mountain - CHEN: Trigram of the Thunder - SUN: Trigram of the Wind).
In the video about I-Ching oracole, the images of the conflict between Israel and Palestine are combined with the Trigrams of a spiritual tradition like Taoism far from Monotheism. A voice-off, under the music by Brian Eno, explains the meaning of the 64 Hexagrams of the oracle book introduced in Europe by C. G. Jung.