Scylla’s Swerve at Nitroglobus in Second Life

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, August 2024: Scylla Rhiadra – Swerve

August 5th, 2024, saw the opening of Swerve, a themed exhibition by Scylla Rhiadra, hosted by Dido Haas at her Nitroglobus Roof Gallery.

Scylla is, quite frankly one of the most gifted communicators in Second Life; her ability to to use art to convey ideas, feelings, realities and truths, and/or to expose concepts and ideas and encourage the grey stuff between the ears to start firing on all available cylinders, is second to none. This is especially true with Swerve, which takes as its subject matter, a visualisation of the essence of De rerum natura, (“On the nature of things”), a six-part (and potentially unfinished) poem by the 1first century BCE Roman poet and Epicurean philosopher, Titus Lucretius Carus.

It is also, again quite frankly, an exhibition I’ve found exceptionally difficult to write about. This is partially due to the fact that Scylla lays out out the inspiration and ideas for the exhibition quite wonderfully through both a poster on the wall close the gallery’s main landing point and through the notecard that can be obtained by touching said poster. As such, anything I might further say on in this regard is rendered somewhat superfluous.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, August 2024: Scylla Rhiadra – Swerve
“Swerve” is the most usual translation of the Latin term clinamen, a key word and concept in De Rerum Natura, a 1st-century BCE philosophical poem by Titus Lucretius Carus. Lucretius was the great populariser of Epicureanism, and his poem is a long and detailed explication of the ancient understanding of atomism, and of its implications for human life. It is also, in an important sense, the inspiration for this exhibition.
Lucretius tells us that nothing that is not “matter,” composed of atomic particles, exists in the universe. We swim through a torrential downpour of plummeting atoms that crowd the void of space, and these fall naturally in a straight line. Vitally, however, they also sometimes swerve from their straight, downward course and, colliding with others, cohere into new clumps of matter or ricochet off each other in unpredictable ways. “Swerve” is thus the foundation of all existing things, and, as importantly, of all change. The idiosyncratic motion of these swerving atoms is also, Lucretius asserts, the origin of human free will, for we too “swerve” from our natural course according to the dictates of our appetites and passions.

Scylla Rhiadra, introducing Swerve

There’s also the fact that by pure happenstance, I’ve not long since finished reading Greenblatt’s The Swerve: How the World Became Modern, the story of how the last known remaining copy of De rerum natura was rescued from certain loss in the early 15th century, helping to kick-start our modern understanding of modern physics an physical sciences.

While there is much that is perhaps questionable within The Swerve (particularly around Greenblatt’s propensity to interject his own view on religion together with a blurring of historical lines), I have nevertheless found it hard to divorce my thoughts on the fundamental story of the rescuing of the poem and how it potentially influenced modern thinking as outlined in Greenblatt’s book, from Scylla’s far more focused and elegant examination of her opening question posed when introducing her exhibition:

What does it mean to live in a godless, materialist universe ruled by the laws of physics and propelled by the endless fall and collision of atoms in apparently chaotic order?

Scylla Rhiadra, introducing Swerve

This is not in any way to fault Scylla; the fault is mine alone; I have lacked the mental discipline to keep my mind focused purely on Scylla’s work.

However, in trying to keep that focus, what I can say is this. The images Scylla present within Swerve are – as always – of a nature that allows each of them to stand on its own as an engaging piece of art while also offering a depth of reflection and / or enunciation of ideas either posited by Lucretius or to which we might be led in considering of his explanations of life, the nature of the mind and the soul, the driving forces behind our own actions and reactions to the cosmos – and others – around is, and most particularly by our own inner passions and desires, which can both aid and foil us.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, August 2024: Scylla Rhiadra – Swerve

In this there is much subtext to be found within many of these pieces – be it the placement of an icon on the wall or the juxtaposition of a woman’s body behind the bloom of a flower. Some of this again stand quite independently of Lucretius’ writing – but at the same time, understanding his outlook and the Epicurean view of the cosmos and humanity greatly enhances how these pictures might be viewed – an they, aided by Scylla’s words, tickle the desire to know more about this almost-lost didactic poem.

There are perhaps small aspects of Scylla commentary that might give cause for disagreement. Her use of the word godless might be seen as inaccurate, as neither Epicurus nor Lucretius posited a universe without deities; rather they held that such was the natural, elemental nature of an atomic universe, ordered by simple rules and interactions (such as clinamen), there was simply no need for any gods to involve themselves in the affairs of mortals; they could simply get on with enjoying absolute peace for all eternity. However, I would respond by saying that in a wider context – that of the “modern” world – Scylla’s use of godless is well-founded; while we have no evidence throughout De rerum natura that Lucretius was an atheist, in its denial of divine intervention and its repudiation of the immortal soul, the poem was (and sometimes still is) seen as “anti-Christian” and “dangerous”.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, August 2024: Scylla Rhiadra – Swerve

There is so much more I could say – but (thankfully for you) I won’t, other than do go as see this exhibition – read Scylla notes and then view her work; allow it to inhabit your thoughts and whisper to you with the voice of history.

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Miu’s connections at Nitroglobus in Second Life

The Annex, Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, July 2024: Miu (MuiMira)

In introducing the July / August exhibition at the Annex of her Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, Dido notes that she Established the extension to her gallery with the goal of providing young, talented artists an opportunity to showcase their work, but she feels she have not always succeeded in this goal. I would, with love and respect to Dido, dispute this.

One of the major attractions of Nitroglobus is Dido’s ability to provide an opportunity for new talents in Second Life to display their art. Whether it is via the Annex or within the main galley, Dido has consistently been able to showcase the work of people who have subsequently gone on to be highly regarded within the broader Second Life arts community.  It is this innate ability to recognise talent – and to challenge and stretch the abilities of established artists beyond their comfort zones – that makes Dido one of the most skilled curator / patrons of the ats in SL, and Nitroglobus one of the foremost galleries in-world for hosting consistently engaging and often personal exhibitions.

The Annex, Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, July 2024: Miu (MiuMira)

Such is the case with Connections, which opened on July 19th, 2024 within the Annex. This is a small but utterly engaging collection of pieces offered by Miu (MiuMira) in what is her first public exhibition of her photography in-world, although she has already gathered deserved recognition on Flickr. Her work mixing colour and black-and-white photography, predominantly avatar-centric and showing a highly skilled eye and touch for post-processing.

Connections is very much a themed exhibition both in focus and tone. All of the images are black-and-white, the majority with highly minimalist backgrounds (and those that do have a visible background utilise a considered depth of field to ensure it does remain a backdrop, rather than becoming a distracting focus for the eyes), whilst the overall tone is set by a quote from Margaret Atwood:

In the end, we all become stories.

–  Moral Disorder and Other Stories by Margaret Atwood

First published in 2008, Moral Disorders is an exploration of the interconnectedness of lives and life, the stories within it winding through the lives of parents and children, of siblings and friends, of mentors and enemies from the 1930s through the the present, offering – if you will – an album of photographs written in words, spanning the decades from the 1930s through to the present.

The Annex, Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, July 2024: Miu (MiuMira)

It’s a fitting quote and fitting selection of stories, perfectly reflecting the way Connections offers a visual essay concerning the relationship of the connections between mind, heart and emotions which give the passage of life meaning to each and every one of us. Each image offers an expression of one or all of these aspects of experience, offering a set of images which, as Miu notes herself,  reflect the fact that, “We are the authors of our lives, creating our own beautiful adventures and deciding on the main characters within our book”.

For me, more than this, is the fact that Connections reads as a very personal story: throughout the nine images – and with encouragement from Dido – Miu gently reveals how her avatar is very much the digital embodiment of who she is, and how she embraces her own moods, sensitivities and emotions.

Take, for example, Connections (4); the use of the shawl in both hiding most of Miu’s features, the over-the shoulder revealing just a hint of nose and mouth, suggest a person given to a certain shyness and possible introverted self-reflection. However, the shawl also draws attention to the partially-visible tattoo Never Give Up. Even without the rose which tops it (as seen in other images) being visible, the statement speaks to an inner strength, to embraces the lessons of life and the ups and downs of emotions and use them as a means to learn and grow, and also speaks to an ability to support and love.

The Annex, Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, July 2024: Miu (MiuMira)

In this, Miu’s avatar bears much that reflects her own nature, expressions given form through tattoos and via her mode of dress and choice of looks. They combine to tell a story of a person who is very at ease with herself, her heart and her emotions, and who can freely give expression to her inner self, writing the story of her life with each passing day.

A genuinely impressive and engaging collection, and a superb debut exhibition. Highly recommended, and congratulations to Miu and Dido.

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The Demons of Reason at Nitroglobus in Second Life

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery: Maghda – Demons of Reason

Monday, June 17th see the return of evocative photographer Maghda to Nitroglobus Roof Gallery operated and curated by Dido Haas with a monochrome collection entitled Demons of Reason.

Maghda’s avatar studies are never less than richly composed and layered, frequently presenting explorations of self and life, and this is clearly evident in Demons, offering a visual essay on the struggles we have all doubtless suffered: dealing with the demons of irrationality as we try to face the daily challenges of life.

The Demons of Reason lurk in the shadows of our thoughts, challenging the clarity of our understanding. These elusive forces twist logic and distort perceptions, leading us into the labyrinth of irrationality. They whisper doubts and fears, causing us to question even the most evident truths. In this eternal struggle, the Demons of Reason remind us of the fragile balance between knowledge and ignorance.

– Maghda

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery: Maghda – Demons of Reason

These are beautifully minimalist pieces, the majority set against a plain white background, with several using the motif of a bottle or bottles – a motif also seen within the sculptures by Adwehe which support the exhibition. It’s an interesting motif, potentially symbolising a number of elements within the overall theme, such as referencing the way we so often try to bottle up the doubts and irrational thoughts we have all they way through to how we might try to silence them though more liquid means.

As well as the use of the bottle, the images in the collection offers views on how we might respond to our inner demons – and how thy might equally and irrationally take us over, becoming more that tiny voices inside us but near-physical entities whom we cannot ignore, leaving us feeling their darkness or somehow separated from those around us, leaving us ghosted to them – or them to us. Meanwhile, the tinges of green suggest the jealousy / envy that so often accompanies such irrationalities.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery: Maghda – Demons of Reason

Maghda has intentionally avoided giving her images individual titles, and this allows us to appreciate them more fully, allowing each one to speak directly and individually to our own thinking / mood / imagination. As such, Demons of Reason is an exhibition which should be seen rather than experienced second-hand.

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Splash the Gouache at Nitroglobus in Second Life

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery Annex, May/June 2024: Onceagain (Manoji Yachvili)

Currently open within the Nitroglobus Roof Gallery Annex, operated and curated by Dido Haas, is a fascinating mixed-media exhibition of art by Onceagain (Manoji Yachvili). It brings together gouache painting, Second Life avatar photography and software post-processing to produce a series (or should that be part of a series, given this is apparently not the full collection?) of 16 utterly engaging pieces of the artist calls Splash the Gauche.

As a self-taught artist, Onceagain has a creative range to her work that is as impressive as it is visually engaging. She notes in her own introduction to A Splash of Gouache, that part of the inspiration for the pieces contained in this exhibition came by way of having recently completely a course in tempera painting whilst also experimenting software tools focused on painting and drawing, before going on to state:

So I took some photos of my avi on SL and then post-produced them with this software and printed them on watercolour paper, giving them some real touches. I’m old school, I need to experiment first hand by touching and not just looking at what I’ve produced on a monitor and I often hang what I like on the walls of my home … The mix between three media: SL, SW and RL seemed like an interesting path to experiment and I simply enjoyed working on this.

– Onceagain (Manoji Yachvili)

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery Annex, May/June 2024: Onceagain (Manoji Yachvili)

For those not familiar with them, tempera and gouache are somewhat similar techniques, each with a very long history. They consist of combining pigments with a water-soluble binding agent (often egg yolk in the case of tempera, or gum arabic in the case of gouache). Both are long-lasting, and can infuse the paper on which they are painted whilst being very opaque when dry. Tempera is perhaps the faster drying of the two, with gouache capable of being moistened again to dry in a matte finish.

Within Splash the Gouache – the title presumably referring to the overall finish to the pieces in the collection – Onceagain presents a series of avatar studies, some of which feature sufficient nudity to potentially be considered NSFW. All of them have a feeling watercolour lightness combined with the gouache aspect of lighter tones appearing to have perhaps dried darker than than they had originally been, and the darker tones similarly lighter. This gives all of the pieces a blending of colour and tone that – even in those leaning towards darker tones and shades – have a certain lightness of being about them; a sense of life and vitality as the eyes are inevitably drawn to the figure within each piece.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery Annex, May/June 2024: Onceagain (Manoji Yachvili)

Also present within each picture – again in part thanks to the combining of technique and the use of colour as much as the subject’s pose – is a sense of emotion and / or reflection of mood which more traditional means of imaging and portrayal might not so easily convey. There is narrative within each piece, although what that narrative might be is likely to vary according to the eyes viewing the pieces. In all they are tactile in the manner in which they hold the eye and mind – which is not unfitting, given Onceagain’s own preference for making physical contact with her art, rather than just rendering on a monitor screen.

Running through to the latter part of June 2024, Splash the Gouache is well suited to the large image format utilised at Nitroglobus, allowing us to fully appreciate the beauty of the pieces and Onceagain’s mastery of both her art and her use of technology. Thoroughly recommended.

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The First Day … at Nitroglobus in Second Life

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, May 2024: Selen Minotaur – The First Day

Most of us have likely heard the expression “[Today / This] is the first day of the rest of your life” – but what exactly does it mean when we hear it / say it? What does it pertain to life and how we face it?

For most of us, the response to that question might well lean towards the promise that with each new day comes the opportunity to seize new opportunities, to put the past behind us and look forward to all the potential the future offers. For others, however, the expression might be seen as more a curse than an expression of hope, as Selen Minotaur explores in her exhibition The First Day, (subtitled of the rest of your life) which opened on May 13th, 2024 at Dido Haas’ Nitroglobus Roof gallery.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, May 2024: Selen Minotaur – The First Day

The easiest way to describe the installation – which encompasses 2D and 3D elements an multimedia, is to refer to Selen’s own words:

“The first day of the rest of your life” usually refers to a new beginning, full of promise and hope. But what if that first day was actually a repeat of the previous days, or worse, a nightmare?
This exhibition speaks of the fears, beliefs and fantasies that invade us in the face of the unknown. And the courage it takes to overcome them, mobilize and move forward. Because no matter what anyone says, the first day of the rest of your life remains a mystery…

In terms of the images, this brings forth a series of richly layered pieces which, depending on your mood and perspective on visiting, might be interpreted in differing ways, both within the context of the the exhibition’s theme and in a manner which might also encapsulate different aspects of both it and how we opt to interpret the underpinning expression.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, May 2024: Selen Minotaur – The First Day

Take The First Station, a marvellously layer image encapsulating ideas of trying to move forward in life whilst forever unable to leave what has come before as it seeks to pin us in place and blind our ability to see how we can move forward, instead making us look forever back at what has been rather than towards the freedom of what might be. Beautifully symbolised through the use of red colouring, the black and reaching out from between the rail sleepers, the tracks themselves and the eye in the mirror, the symbolic core of this piece is perfectly framed.

Then there is  First Sunrise. This is a piece which might be seen as one of those casting a wider net of potential interpretation. The promise of a new day, of open horizons and all the promise they hold – be they through the arrival of a new day which marks our decision to mark it as a new beginning, our “first sunrise”, so to speak, or the literal first sunrise of birth. At the same time, the Sun rises as a clock, the ever present reminder that life is finite; that no matter who or where we are, we are allotted a finite time. Do we allow it to dominate us, to cause us to live in fear of the every diminishing pile of minutes left to us? Or do we simply “live in the moment”? Where does the balance lay? Is life itself not a state of progress from the former to the latter?

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, May 2024: Selen Minotaur – The First Day

There is more I could state here around the likes of the caged head, the face mask, and the 3d elements; in fact, I did start – but the reality is, The First Day should be experienced first hand and interpreted directly – and possibly over more than one visit. All I will say here is that I recommend viewing the images and sculptures first prior to viewing the video; in this way, ideas are neatly framed and the narrative then unfolds.

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Abstract Event Horizons at Nitroglobus in Second Life

The Annex at Nitroglobus: Kirjat Umarov – Event Horizons

Currently open through most of April 2024 at the Annex of Dido Haas’ Nitroglobus Roof Gallery is Event Horizons, a series of abstract art pieces by  Kirjat Umarov.

The title of the exhibition draws directly on the astrophysical phenomenon defining a boundary beyond which events cannot affect an observer. Coined in 1950 by the Austrian physicist Wolfgang Rindler, it’s a term most commonly associated with black holes, celestials object so dense that no nearby matter or radiation can escape their gravitational influence. Most often, if rather simplistically, the event horizon is defined as the boundary within which black hole’s escape velocity is greater than the speed of light, and so light itself cannot escape it, and thus we cannot know what actually occurs on the other side of the boundary, we can only theorise.

The Annex at Nitroglobus: Kirjat Umarov – Event Horizons

Given that Kirjat’s work and studies encompass the theology of Christianity, religious iconography and thematic devices which might be considered as representations of an “unknowable God” (as well as touching on art history and philosophy and the human condition), the title of the exhibition is well chosen, inviting us to try to look beyond the surface presentation of the 16 images presented around the walls of the Annex (one being a triptych, and as such counts as a single piece), and consider their potential meaning and interpretation – or, as Dido states in her liner notes for the piece – allow ourselves to be drawn ever closer to the event horizon of each piece as we ponder its meaning and potential for interpretation.

Some of the pieces would appear to reflect current world events – perhaps most obviously Peace Glory Honour, referencing as it does the people of Ukraine as they face the aggression foisted upon them by Russia; together with Outbreak, which might be seen as a reference to the continued threat of pandemics in the wake of the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak (COVID-19), which might also lead to thoughts of the risk of such outbreaks spreading unnecessarily through people foolhardy ability to accept conspiracy theories over scientific fact.

The Annex at Nitroglobus: Kirjat Umarov – Event Horizons

Others with the set offer reflections on religion – some perhaps more obviously than others when going purely by their titles. I was drawn to Dekalogos, with its open invitation to consider the Ten Commandments both through its title and the presentation of its 10 symbols. More particularly, Hilasterion and The Holy Curtain gained my attention, each encouraging cogitations on the nature of the Ark of the Covenant, the “Holy of Holies” and the nature of God as portrayed via the Old Testament. Additionally, Hilasterion led me to thoughts of expiation and atonement and thus to reflections on the nature of Christ as a person and as a religious symbol – something that is today particularly relevant given the rise of the religious Right and their persistent misrepresentation of Christ spiritually, philosophically and physically.

But, as always, these are just my subjective thoughts and reactions – yours most likely will be different; which is fine Event Horizons is an individualistically expressive range of abstracts; a series both open to interpretation and, should you opt to purchase any, well suited to display within any SL home.

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