New Orleans with a Halloween Twist in Second Life

Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End, October 2024 – click any image for full size

In August, I wrote about New Deer Isle and the touch of America’s New England that Kaiden Glocke Tray (KaidenTray) had brought to Second Norway (see: Second Norway’s touch of New England in Second Life). Kaiden is a gifted Second Life landscaper and his work can be seen across the grid places large and small, some of which I’ve also covered in these pages over the years.

For Halloween 2024, Kaiden presents Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End, a region-wide build presented on a Full private region leveraging the Land Capacity bonus. It’s a setting with a lot packed into it, both in terms of what to see and what is happening there throughout the month of October.

Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End, October 2024
Welcome to the most haunted and realistic location of New Orleans. It is a post-apocalyptic and dystopian environment, which was left bare after the flooding of Hurricane Katrina, There is an abandoned but interactive theme park with rides that still work, but ride them at your own risk! Release your competitive side with bumper cars, become lost in the mystical swamp, challenge your courage in the haunted house, create some amazing memories with photos, or get a real life reading from tarot readers!

– Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: greeter message

Unless you are there simply to pose for very specific photos of yourself, this is a place best experienced as it is designed to be seen – using the Shared Environment (World → Environment → Use Shared Environment). As there is a lot in the region that is going to keep the viewer business, I’d suggest that having Shadows enabled is not vital to the overall experience, and some might find they will need to adjust draw distance if they have it to the upper end of the scale. Do make sure that if you’re running a pre-PBR viewer, that you have enabled Advanced Lighting Model (ALM: Preferences → Graphics make sure the appropriate check box is ticked, but not you do not also need to enable shadows), and enable local sounds if you have them off.

Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End, October 2024

So, with all that said, and in the words spoken by Benedict Cummerbatch, “Now, shall we begin?”†

The Landing Point sits towards the western side of the region, along the main street of a Section of New Orleans as it runs north-to-south cross the region, and which is in places flooded (with the tide being held at bay at one end by a wall thrown across the road). The town forms the greater part of the setting, and at its southern end, merges into swamplands crossed by wooden board walks, the waters around them heavy with crocodiles. Among the mangroves and the cabins scattered around are various ritualistic goings on, whilst on the far side of the swamp, what appears to have been an outburst of murderous mayhem has struck the little village there.

Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End, October 2024

Both the bayou/ wetlands and the town also connect with the abandoned theme park as it occupies the north-east portion of the region. Partially flooded, this is fast turning into a wilding of a place – although the rides are still working (if some of them manned by ghoulish characters!), so be ready to try them out. The Landing Point is not enforced, so it is possible to hop around, but explorations on foot are really the only way to go lest you risk missing out on some of the frights.

When arriving at the main Landing Point, a greeter will provide an invite to the local Group, and information on both tours and a special show being staged in the region. Visitors are also offered a flashlight, and ADDing it helps with explorations.

Exactly which path you choose to take when exploring is entirely up to you, and I do not want to give too much away here and possibly spoil things. I will say that the theatre for the stage production is neatly tucked away (if apparently still under construction at the time of my visit, going by the raw prims), so it can sit within the setting without interrupting the overall flow of exploration or seeming to break with the overall region design.

Not all of the buildings have interiors, but those that do should be entered and appreciated / explored. Surprises may await and objects may require touching. I particularly liked the Black Cat Inn offers a cosy and relatively spooky-free place in which to relax. I will admit to being a little confused by the reference to a haunted house; not sure if I simply missed it (or maybe a teleport to it…) due to a case of the Stupids on my part, or whether you have to join one of the tours in order to visit it.

The performances I referred to above feature Theatre 6 in The Witches of New Orleans, with shows at 12:00 noon SLT on Sunday, October 13th, 2024 and 13:00 SLT on Saturday, October 26th, 2024. Dates and times of tours, meanwhile, are per the poster, above right.

Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End, October 2024

I’m not a great fan of Halloween as we treat it in modern times – haunted houses, trick-or-treating as it is now, etc., – although the tapestry of Gaelic influences and the link to Gothic fiction which are tied to Halloween are a different matter. As such, I tend to be a stick-in-the-mud when it comes to the plethora of Halloween themed events and regions and so on which pop-up between late September and early October in Second Life.

However, there are exceptions to this – and Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End is one of them. The region is well-crafted, and explorations offer surprises and things to poke at or ride or enjoy. It offers fun and engagement over simply trying to shock or excite, offering plenty of opportunities for photography as well as offering something just that little bit different by way of events within its boundaries (and some nice (and occasionally lewd!) touches of humour present in some of the signs around the place). So why not head over an have a look?

Witchcraft & Voodoo in New Orleans: The End

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Yes, I know, another obscure film reference, and one not really connected to the subject of the piece. Kudos to those who get it, however.

Shadowfell: A short film from Second Life

Calas Galadhon Shadowfell  – click any image for full size

Every year, Tymus Tenk, Truck Meredith and the Calas team bring us worlds of wonder to explore in the form of their Halloween and Christmas wonderland builds as an adjunct to Calas Galadahon Park, and each year we are gifted with regions of mystical / seasonal delight. Mixing an atmospheric setting rich in places to explore, scenes to uncover, rides to enjoy and events to attend, all knitted together by the weave of environment settings, soundscape and supporting music, these builds are always and genuinely a highlight of Second Life.

For October / Halloween 2024, the Calas team once again present Shadowfell, a three region journey journey through a realm which although probably not modelled specifically after any element of Tolkien’s mythology, carries with it something of a sense of Middle Earth during the Second and Third Ages, mixed with hints of other franchises to offer an engaging potpourri of elements deserving of careful exploration. First presented in 2022 as The Gardens of Shadowfell, the setting was updated and expanded in 2023 (see: A journey through Shadowfell in Second Life), and it is this iteration – with some little tweaks and updates (including the use of PBR materials) – which opened at the start of October 2024 for people to enjoy.

The Shadowfell Pavilion schedule of entertainment for October 2024

As with all of the Calas themed builds, this is one in which it is very important visitors note at least some of the guidelines regarding a visit, all of which can be found at the landing point – with the most important perhaps being:

  • Make sure you Used Shared Environment (via World → Environment).
  • If you are not a PBR viewer, make sure Advanced Lighting Model is active via Preferences → Graphics).
  • Enable local sounds.
  • Make sure you have particles visible.

It also is suggested that those who can, should also enable Shadows via Preferences → Graphics. This is worthwhile if you can – and with the roll-out of the performance improvements within the viewer, this should be easier than it might have once been for a fair number of Second Life users – and I’d at least recommend it for photography.

This year, rather than blathering on and talking the four legs off a donkey describing the setting, I thought I’d offer a video instead – hope you enjoy it (best viewed in You Tube!)!

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Cherishville’s 2024 Autumn in Second Life

Cherishville, October 2024 – click any image for full size

Lam Erin’s Cherishville is a place that changes with the seasons, sometimes shifting location in the process; it’s also a place I do attempt to visit annually in order to catch one of its annual looks. The last time I did so was in winter (see Cherishville’s winter 2023 in Second Life) and I had intended to drop in during the summer during 2024; sadly, that didn’t happen for assorted reasons, so once again it is autumn that brought me back to the setting, and probably not too far ahead of winter once more taking over.

While the setting has at times dipped a toe into more tropical settings, for most of the iterations I’ve covered in these pages it has presented a look and feel of a location somewhere within the North American continent, and the same is true with this iteration. This is not to say they each look in any way similar as the seasons pass; each setting very much has its own unique look and feel. Rather, the general design and flora used within each of Cherishville’s iterations offers as a sense of loose theme for the settings presented, as if they are different locations along a journey.

Cherishville, October 2024

For Autumn 2024, there is also a further dimension to this idea of journeying: that of travelling through time. With a couple of exceptions, the road vehicles occupying the setting suggest the 1930s and 1940s (and even the exceptions suggest a not-too-distant leap from there to the 1950s). While there is nothing implicit to suggest the setting is intended to be from those decades – the buildings sandwiched between the north-side main road and the railway track paralleling it could be from almost any period of the last century and a half (or more) -,  the vehicles help to offer a sense of period to the setting.

But that said, there are anomalies to this feeling: the traffic lights serving the pedestrian crossings along the road seem to come from much later that the 1940s; whilst in terms of location, there are touches here and there that are perhaps more European in nature, such as a British telephone box and French-style advertising kiosk. Whilst these might be slightly anachronistic given the North American vibe noted above, they nevertheless work and remind us that SL can be anywhere we chose it to be.

Cherishville, October 2024

It is on the north side of the setting mentioned above that the designated (but unenforced) Landing Point has been set. It sits at the western extent of the road, which points towards the steeple of the local church sitting at its far end. A bridge with the promise of a botanic garden on its other side forms the local ending to the road, but the sign’s promise is false: across its pan is just a small spit of land. Street lamps along the road huddle under the boughs of tree from which the wind is pulling brown and gold leaves whilst the rain covers the cobble road’s surface in a patina of ripple-spreading splashes.

Set back from the road and behind the protection of a wrought iron fence, the miscellaneous houses and cottages seem to offer various retreats from the tumbling rain, both indoors and under the false shelter of a pergola, although it is perhaps the bakery-café alongside the railway platform which offers the warmest and cosiest welcome. Trains and tracks tend to be another motif in Lam’s build, and the presence of the track as it sits over the large, flagstone-paved expanse  behind the houses gives the setting a further link to past iterations of Cherishville.

Cherishville, October 2024

The train rail are further paralleled by a broad body of water entering the setting from its eastern end, where it passes under a low-slung bridge to flow through the landscape before making a right turn through boulders and shallows, making a turn to the north. Here it slips under the railway bridge and that of the one promising a walk through the botanic park, and from there exiting the region once.

South of the water and road bridge, the countryside of the setting becomes more rural and perhaps a little more mysterious. An old armchair sits out on the road just beyond the bridge, potentially hampering traffic whilst also maybe directing attention to the roofed cart with its lights and hay bails as possibly offering a slightly drier place for people to sit. Tall ranks of corn on the cob plants stand on parade to one side of the road here, apparently called to order by the slightly spooky scarecrow standing in their midst, his arms perches for local ravens.

Cherishville, October 2024

The local road sign here is not encouraging, offering directions to the likes of the Bates Motel, Amityville, Elm St., and Sleepy Hollow amongst other destinations; however it is in keeping with the time of year, so might have been raised by some local wag as a Halloween joke, particularly given the nature of the little barn sitting at the end of the track the road sign guards.

Another barn stands atop a low hill on the southern extent of the land, but this one appears to be far more for the purposes of farming. Certainly, the guard duty here has been taken over by rows of innocently-faced sunflowers, leaving the grasping fingers of the corn behind. The sunflowers are also marshalled by far less creepy scarecrow as the road loops past to make its way back to where it is crossed by the railway line, the bridge of which offering a way back to town.

Cherishville, October 2024

Caught under a leaden sky heavy with cloud and in keeping with the downpour, Cherishville offers numerous places to sit and – as one would expect – multiple opportunities for photography. I wasn’t too convinced by the little ball of a full Moon lurking at tree-top height and looking as if it might be looking for a place to land between the region’s eastern side and the outlying region surround – but a quick click with object derender meant it was no longer a distraction. Outside of this, meandering and camming through Cherishville came with its usual pleasure, and it was interesting to see someone else putting what appears to be Alex Bader’s PBR terrain materials to good use (as I’ve done on my home island).

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Lost in Space(: 1999) in Second Life

Space: 1999 – Moonbase Alpha

September 13th, 2024 marked the anniversary of a momentous and crippling event in Earth’s history. It was on that day that a nuclear waste disposal site on the far side of the Moon reached critical mass, causing a thermonuclear detonation of immeasurable force, shattering the Moon and hurling it from Earth’s orbit and into the depths of space, carrying with it the 311 surviving souls on Moonbase Alpha.

Passing beyond the range of their fleet of Eagle Transporters and making a full-scale evacuation evacuation, and with Earth unable to mount a rescue mission, the people of Moonbase Alpha could only signal their survival as they departed, never to be heard from again. 

– Extract from Pey’s Encyclopaedia of Space Exploration (2024 edition)

Of course, nothing like the above ever happened – but in 1974, the premise of the Moon being flung into interstellar space as a result of a massive chain reaction of thermonuclear events (and aided by the odd wormhole or two, amongst other things), carrying the 311 people trapped on Moonbase Alpha with it, lay at the heart of the Anglo-American television series Space: 1999.

Space: 1999 – Moonbase Alpha

I didn’t personally catch-up with Space:1999 until the 1990s, and while it struck me as perhaps and little too focused on the Alien of Week type of threat, providing disbelief was sufficiently suspended, it could be a fun watch – and it cannot be denied that considerable work went into making Moonbase Alpha a believable place and the Eagle Transporter perhaps one of the most well-conceived and “real world” space vehicle designs to be featured on television as coming from a near-future period in our development of spaceflight technology.

While the series was cancelled after just two seasons, the show lived on  – as with many sci-fi series – in the world of fandom, where continues to enjoy much support and popularity. This support and interest continues into Second Life,  where fans and role-players can take up a active role in operations within Moonbase Alpha, thanks to Mitch Charron. His Space: 1999 – Moonbase Alpha is an impressive representation of significant parts of Moonbase Alpha as seen in the first season of the series, bringing together familiar and iconic elementsfrom the show, including the commander’s desk, the comm-posts standing along the corridors, the station’s surface buggies and – of course – the Eagle Transporter.

Welcome to Moonbase Alpha! Inspired by the Space: 1999 70s SciFi TV series, MBA is an-going project of themed roleplay of space exploration and alien encounters, set a few years before Breakaway (and working our way there and beyond :). The Moonbase is still under construction, evolving and expanding but fully operational. We create multi-session ‘episodes’ which we play out over a period of time. While Alpha is our home base, our scenarios often involve multiple sims developed by members depending on the needs of our episodes.   

– From the information notecard available at any of the station’s comm posts.

Space: 1999 – Moonbase Alpha

And when I say impressive, I mean exactly that; it is clear that considerable effort has be put into the interior design, faithfully reproducing the aesthetics of the original sets and interiors and their signage / iconography. As well as Main Mission and the commanding officer’s expansive office space (complete with the large sliding doors to separate it from the bustle of Main Mission for conferences and the like), the interiors include a part of Doctor Helena Russell’s medical centre, a portion of the science facilities (one lab of which appears to be for Professor Victor Bergman), the station’s solarium and nuclear generation plant (both, I believe, seen in the episode Force of Life), a section of the travel tube network, and a series of corridors connecting all of these elements together and linking them to crew accommodation and recreation facilities.

Explorations of the facility start at a Landing Point neatly situated within the passenger pod of an Eagle Transporter. From here, the starboard doors from the pod (when facing towards the flight deck) open into a travel tube car, and its opening is accompanied by the initial fanfare of the show’s original (and best, I think) theme tune for those with local sounds enabled – and in this regard, having them enabled is recommended, as many of the sounds from the series can be heard throughout the facility, adding further depth.

Space: 1999 – Moonbase Alpha

Two exits are available from the travel tube car. One leads to the nuclear generating facility mentioned above, and the lifeblood of Alpha (just beware the warning beams!) or exit into Alpha itself via a security station and passing the airlock (surface EVA possible through the latter). Following the corridors from her will take visitors past all of the major facilities and to the elevator up to Main Mission. Here it is quite easy to imagine Paul Morrow overseeing operations with Sandra Benes dependably at his side, and perhaps Victor Bergman caught in a technical discussion with David Kano.

As noted in the introductory notecard, RP in the setting is intended to be relaxed and fun, with the station also forming a hang-out for those involved. In addition to Alpha, the setting currently also includes a part of the nuclear waste facilities and their monitoring station. During my visit, Mitch informed me he’s working on other elements such as the space station where the Ultra Probe has been constructed prior to the events of the series (and seen in flashbacks during Dragon’s Domain – an episode which utilised Tomaso Albinoni’s Adagio in G Minor so movingly and emotively to help drive the story, making it for me the best of Space: 1999).

Space: 1999 – Moonbase Alpha

Those wishing to join with the role-play are encouraged to read the introductory notecard for information on the likes of Alpha uniform sleeve colour, in-world availability of uniforms and Alpha spacesuits, etc.

With some gentle touches of humour mindful of how set builders oft utilised off-the-shelf items to dress sets (Commodore, anyone?), Space 1999 – Moonbase Alpha is an engaging build for visitors and RPers alike.

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Coffee and a Salty C in Second Life

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024 – click any image for full size

As can be seen by flicking through my Exploring Second Life series, one of the things I enjoy is seeking out coffee house style hang-outs, as well as places that are photogenically pleasing and interesting to explore. Within Les Bean at the Salty C, I found a place that combines all three – hardly surprising given the region’s designers: Emm (Emm Evergarden) of The Nature Collective fame (among other things) and Teagan Cerulean.

The smell of salt in the air, the crash of waves, and distant harbor ferry welcomes you. Set sail to a place where the ocean whispers tales of a magical island. Whether seeking solace, adventure, or inspiration, the Cerulean offers a storybook escape.

– Les Bean at the Salty C About Land Description

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024

Occupying a Full private region leveraging the Lab’s Land Capacity bonus, the setting is very much multiple-part in nature whilst forming a fairly continuous set of landscapes. By this I mean that within the region there is a mix of private occupancy homes, public spaces and private rentals, all of which are split across the three islands into which the region has been split, with the islands themselves offering landscapes that flow one to the next.

Of these islands, the triangular one sitting in the region’s south-east corner appears to be entirely private in nature, existing within its own parcel and entirely separated from the rest of the region by the intervening stretches of water. As such, it plays no further role in this article. Of the other two, both offer a mix of public and private areas, but with a clear delineation between the two, reducing the risk of trespass.

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024

The main island, oriented north-to-south along the western side of the region, is home to the main Landing Point for the setting. Separated from the other two islands by a central channel of water, this island comprises a central public area forming a small town-style element, bracketed to the south and north by private residences, those to the north being available for rent at the time of my visit. The Landing Point sits on a cobbled plaza overlooking the waterfront of the central channel and backed by the coffee house, which shares the space with an ice cream parlour and a record store.

It is here that I must underscore the need for careful exploration and camming here; not only is the region packed with detail throughout, there is also some super little touches of humour to be found around the town in the form of signs and chalkboards; some of which I perhaps identified with a little too much (e.g. “I tried starting a day without coffee once – My court date is pending”). The town itself has a curiously mixed feel which is equally charming to take in; by turn offering touches of rural France, the Mediterranean, hints of Tuscany – and even flavours of Mexico and North America (the latter in the form of the stream train halted at the local station). Life to the setting is added by the presence of a range of vehicles, washing hanging on lines, place settings at the restaurant, a town market, and an engaging soundscape (I particularly liked the train service announcements!).

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024

At the northern end of the little town is a flight of steps descending into the residential rentals area of the island, headed by a map of the region highlighting the available properties. Trespass here can be avoided by keeping to the boardwalks laid over the grass here, and one of these does actually lead to a public seating area on a deck up towards the north-west corner of the island.

The waterfront below the little town is a busy little area, offering some mooring space for small boats running directly below the sea wall, and a wharf pointing out into the channel. The latter is home to a little rough-and-ready bar and docking for the local ferry. The latter is Analyse Dean’s excellent Bandit vehicular ferry, which chugs its way back and forth between this pier and the one on the west coast of the island occupying the north-east quarter of the region, which is home to the rest of the public spaces within the setting.

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024

This triangular island has – to me – more of a feel of North America. Heavily wooded, it also has a private residence within it, so some caution is required when exploring, particularly as the path winding away from the ferry dock eventually arrives at said private residence, climbing up to it by way of steps cut into a hill slope. However, as there is plenty of humorous warning the house in question is a private residence (“No Trespassing. We’re tired of hiding the bodies”), visitors can avoid it and simply carry on to the tumbledown and strange house sitting further up the hill.

The latter is one of two places on the island offering a sense of the haunted as brooms magically sweep floors. I’ll leave you to find the other such place on the island, and say only that it also has an item of clothing that seems to be knitting itself to add to the slightly haunted feel, and that the location itself is again charming in its general presentation, even if the cabin is itself is oddly overgrown.

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024

As noted, this is a highly photogenic setting with a lot to see – more than I’ve covered here (the sense of ghostly mystery is enhanced to the southern end of the main water channel and close to the lighthouse, for example, where ghostly singing might be heard)  -, so again, care in exploring is well worthwhile. Given the soundscape available through the region, do make sure local sounds are enabled, and use of the region’s shared environment is also recommended, as it gives a suitably autumnal feel in keeping with the rest of the region.

In all, and enjoyable place to visit.

Les Bean at the Salty C, September 2024

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Returning to Subcutan art Gallery in Second Life

Subcutan Art Gallery, September 2024

In November 2023, I wrote about the redevelopment of Subcutan Art Gallery, both an art hub for the work of Sophie de Saint Phalle (Perpetua1010) and a mix of public spaces designed by Sophie and her SL partner, Dex (Dexter Kharg). It was a location I’d been watching as it developed for several months before blogging about it, simply because of the mix of spaces it provided and the care being put into the overall design.

Well, a year is a long time in Second Life, and since then, Subcutan has relocated and altered somewhat in nature and size. Now occupying just shy of one quarter of a Full private region (one leveraging the Land Capacity bonus), it now forms home for Sophie’s gallery spaces and the Japanese Garden from the previous iteration, but with the loss of some of the other public spaces; instead, the ground-level gallery with its Landing Point and adjoining gardens are now bracketed by private / rental space to either side. However, given the latter are well separated from the public spaces, there is no risk of accidental invasion of privacy.

Subcutan Art Gallery, September 2024

The gallery itself comprises the ground-level hall, currently displaying Atramentum, with a number of sky halls featuring further installations by Sophie, all of which are reached via the teleport board just outside the ground-level gallery and alongside the Landing Point. Note also that this teleporter also provides access to Sophie’s Ninfa and Inspiration Ice installations, both of which are being hosted by other gallery spaces.

Atramentum presents a series of inks studies of the nude female body by Sophie. Rendered as fine mesh forms using identifiable poses and gestures intended to visualise the sensitivity, tension and longing of the psyche, with Sophie noting:

The resolution of the upper half of the head and that of the extremities speak to freedom, imagination and mobility – while dark areas conceal or hint at discretion, secrets and deep subconscious impulses [and] The torso, with its hard, torn edges, shows confrontation with brutal reality. Here the net is usually darker and wants to embody breathing in the tank.

– Sophie e Saint Phalle on Atramentum

It is a fascinating display of the human form, both physically and emotively, the individual pieces beautiful drawn with Sophie’s usual skill.

Subcutan Art Gallery, September 2024: Sophie de Saint Phalle – Atramentum

Within the sky areas, Sophie presents two somewhat “related” exhibitions in terms of their use of a primary colour – Red Impressions and Yellow Impressions. The latter is a further marvellous collection of studies of the female form, whilst Red Impressions is a rich mix of pieces, both studies and abstract.

Meanwhile, Escape bridges the virtual world of art with the physical and demonstrate Sophie’s work as a experimentalist artist. It presents a collection of intense black-and-white photographs taken during a physical work art performance. Again, to let Sophie explain:

I put a big canvas (4×12 metres) on a stage and painted it in front of the visitors. Behind the canvas 10 professional dancers were waiting to cut the canvas and force their bodies through the openings to symbolize the escape from suppression, humiliation, brutality, disrespect and most of all the escape from indifference. At the end of the performance the canvas was cut into strips and sold.

– Sophie e Saint Phalle on Escape

The performance piece and the resulting photographs offer a visual essay on the human condition in a stark form, the environment in which Escape is presented serving to emphasis this in a manner that draws the visitor into the exhibition.

Subcutan Art Gallery, September 2024: Sophie de Saint Phalle – Escape

Within the Light, Gold and Water galleries visitor can find broader selections of Sophie’s portfolio, further demonstrating the richness of her work. What is additionally engaging with these galleries is how Sophie again uses the form and presentation of the the physical spaces – style, colour, openness, etc., to compliment her art.

Within Genesis, Sophie offers another “colour” themed collections, this focusing on gold, with Sophie noting:

Gold gives me the opportunity to use a form of expression that lives in warmth and light, shines and has a high value. My great respect for creation, its ethics and aesthetics, its diversity and perfection always fascinates me. I would love to dip the whole universe in gold and decorate it with ornaments. Symbolic, of course, so to speak, a grateful homage, a mythical act. With my gold I am just trying to show the high value of life and to convey a positive world of thought.

– Sophie e Saint Phalle on Genesis

Subcutan Art Gallery, September 2024: Sophie de Saint Phalle – Genesis

All of these are, I believe semi-permanent exhibitions, having been present that the iteration of Subcutan I visited in November 2023 – but it possible some may change / be replaced as Sophie makes way for her more recent exhibitions such as Ninfa, and Inspiration Ice.

Inspiration Ice (which, at the time of writing was also available at both Frank Atisso’s Artsville art hub, and at @Back Music Club and Galleries) features nude drawings set against icy backgrounds and within an ice-like environment,. Through the use of a sense of ice and cold within the images and the icy environment in which the exhibition with its broken surface indicate of the dangers of ice breaking underfoot, all symbolise the hardness and coldness that be be present in multiple aspects of life, and our vulnerability to being hurt by them.  At the same time the poses used to represent the nudes suggest resilience and strength, representing our ability to face such hostility and move beyond it.

Subcutan Art Gallery, September 2024: Sophie de Saint Phalle – Inspiration Ice

Ninfa offers something of a physical journey through several alienesque levels and featuring an expansion of her Gold work; however the emphasis within it is not the images per se; it is about making the journey.

When visiting Sophie’s art at Subcutan Art Gallery or her hosted exhibitions, I do recommend using the shared EEP environment at each location and – if you are using a non-PBR viewer – to have Advanced Lighting Model enabled. And be assured that, whether visiting any of Sophie’s exhibitions, you’re assured an engaging and highly visual time.

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