The Faces We Have Lost at Nitroglobus in Second Life

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, October 2024: The Faces We Have Lost
In March 2014, Dido Haas hosted a joint exhibition by Sina Souza and Sabbian Paine entitled The Masks We Wear, at Nitroglobus Gallery. It formed an exploration of the fact that whether we are aware of it or not, we all wear masks / adopt personas on a daily basis throughout our lives in respect of the people with whom we interact and the places in which we engage with them.

To be honest, I thought I had covered that exhibition in these pages, but alas, my memory is playing tricks on me and it appears not; matters of self, identify and the pressure of society are subjects I find fascinating. Fortunately, that exhibition was celebrated in film and can be found on You Tube.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, October 2024: The Faces We Have Lost (Sabbian Paine)

Also fortunately, and a decade on from The Masks We Wear, Sina and Sabbian have again returned to Nitroglobus Roof Gallery to present a continuance to their original exhibition; one that can be explored and appreciated regardless as to whether or not we saw or remember The Masks We Wear. This is because the new exhibition, which runs through October 2024 and is entitled The Faces We Have Lost, looks at the subject matter through a slightly different lens, as Sina and Sabbian explain in their introduction:

While people still wear masks every day to protect themselves, to hide, to achieve advantages or to slip into another form of existence [as explored through The Masks we Wear], they also lose parts of their real face in the form of innocence, happiness or the freedom, to be the person, who they really are. At a certain point in life we ​​may be more the mask than the real face or the mask has become a face. The question which [then] arises is ‘what is the mask and what is the face?’

– Sina Souza and Sabbian Paine, The Faces We Have Lost

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, October 2024: The Faces We Have Lost (Sina Souza)

Thus, across the two halls of the gallery, Sina and Sabbian individually and jointly explore the concept of the blurring of true self and projected self (“masks”) and, to my eyes at least, on how society has sought to constrict us through the expectation that is is the mask and not the true self we are expected to wear at all times. In this they are both uniquely and jointly gifted through their ability to use metaphor, surrealism, abstraction and colour to present images that resonate in meaning.

These are pieces which beautifully encapsulate how the use of masks to hide ourselves can be as harmful as it can be – as Wilde observed in The Critic as Artist; A dialogue Part 2 – liberating, largely thanks to the demands of society. So it is that within this exhibition might be found reflections of having to hide personal feelings – hurt, sorrow, loneliness – behind a smile, a quip, and assumed jollity to the point when even when we are in a position to take of the mask, we no longer can; the clown persists, the tears lost, the body as faded and blackened as the moods that grip us.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, October 2024: The Faces We Have Lost (Sabbian Paine)

These are very visual essays on matters with which the vast majority of us will recognise; that no matter what our fears and anxieties must be, society demands we always look and appear “normal”, and that giving vent to those fears – by they of flying or simply another day at the office – is “wrong” and “unnatural”, thus leading us to a point where even when alone, it is the anxieties that replace the mask, becoming us, suppressing who we might once have been – and thus we become numbed to the needs of others, our masks of indifference between defining aspects of who we are, rather than what lies behind them.

And if this sounds dark, perhaps it is; but The Faces We Have Lost is also positive in its message: by shining a light and encouraging us to ask questions about who he are and how we behave and that those around us might be feeling exactly what we are feeling, it might well encourage to be more empathic with ourselves and others.

Nitroglobus Roof Gallery, October 2024: The Faces We Have Lost (Sina Souza)

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Nils’ Autumn Lights in Second Life

Kondor Art Club, October 2024: Nils Urqhart – Autumn Lights
Currently open through October at the Kondor Art Club is a new exhibition of photography by Nils Urqhart entitled Autumn Lights.

For those not familiar with his work, Nils is a professional photographer-artist hailing from France in the physical world, whose work is focused on landscapes, particularly those found within France’s numerous (and quite breath-taking) mountain ranges. In this, he covers everything from the magnificent and dramatic heights of the French Alps to the much lower (in terms to summit height, but no less impressive in scope and landscape) Jura and Vosges, the latter with their distinctive ballon summits, and Bugey.

Kondor Art Club, October 2024: Nils Urqhart – Autumn Lights

Since 2007, Nils has brought many of these landscapes and scenes into Second Life, offering nigh-on 180 (at the time of writing!) exhibitions which serve as travelogues of his walks and hikes through the mountains and countryside of France. Within Autumn Lights, he presents a fall walk through the Vosges and (primarily, I think) the French Alps, capturing the golden richness of the foliage, the majesty of the snow-capped peaks beyond and the rugged beauty of the land and the homes people create within the valleys and among the hills.

These are images that bring home the full depth of Nils’ compositional skill. Within them we find greens, golds, browns and yellows set against skies so blue they stray towards cobalt and touched here and there with ribbons of cloud; or the yellow tides of trees flowing up the slopes of stonewashed hill to meet their zenith, the rocky slopes rolling back to where their rounded tops are backed by snowbound peaks at even greater heights; or the checkerboard of small fields sets within the golden march of firs, their boundaries marked by embankments and dry stone, the grass within them pale and sunwashed…

Kondor Art Club, October 2024: Nils Urqhart – Autumn Lights

Each image offered through Autumn Lights has a story to tell; a story of the stately grace of these mountains, the formation of which started 300 million years ago and sharing something of an ancestry with the Himalayas, together (on a smaller scale) the people who populate them, which itself reminds us that humans inhabited these region as far back as the palaeolithic period.

But more than this, these images tell the story of a man in love with the country and landscapes in which he lives and travels; they form – as I’ve noted-  a travelogue of his times within these mountains and their foothills, walking, hiking, exploring. As such they can be appreciated for the beauty they convey quite naturally and fully, whilst also inviting us into Nils’ life and allowing us to witness them through his eyes and thus share in his love for the places he records on camera.

Kondor Art Club, October 2024: Nils Urqhart – Autumn Lights

A genuinely beautiful selection of images.

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Colours of Life – art and artists in Second Life

Black Tulip Gallery, October 2024

I returned to Black Tulip Gallery as October brought with it the kind of weather that made me feel as though hiding under the duvet would be a snugly-good idea. However, I braved the walk to my study(!), in order to take a peek at the October exhibition at the gallery. Operated and curated by Zoey Rhodan (ElizabethZoey), Black Tulip is a small, boutique-style gallery space located within the Confederation of Democratic Simulators (CDS), offering a richness of art and artistry within its exhibitions.

For this exhibition, entitled Colours of Life, the gallery features the work of no fewer than thirteen artists from across Second Life, and does so without feeling overcrowded in the process, given its relatively small size. The pieces displayed are from Zoey’s personal collection, and as the name suggests, the exhibition has been built around the theme of reflections on life and on living.

Black Tulip Gallery, October 2024: CybeleMoon

The participating artists comprise: AmandaT Tamatzui, Cayla (YumiYukimura), CybeleMoon (Hana Hoobinoo), Duna Gant, Ellie Baily, Hadiya Draper, Milena Carbone (Mylena1992), Raven Arcana, Sophie de Saint Phalle (Perpetua1010), and Tess (Therese Carfagno), (all one image apiece); Bamboo Barnes and Mareea Farrasco (two apiece); and Christian Carter (3 pieces). The art itself ranges from pieces generated via pictures captured in-world, through AI generated art / digital compositions to physical work by the artist uploaded to and rendered within SL.

As reflections on life and living, they are as richly varied as the styles and techniques used to produce them; from single-frame stories in either black and white or colour (such as CybeleMoon’s – someone whose presence in SL I greatly miss – The Shell Seekers and Raven Arcana’s When the Sun Goes Down) through to the expressive experimentalism of Bamboo Barnes and the abstract art of Tess, to the social commentary found in the likes of Christian Carter’s Fake, with its portrayal of loneliness hidden by the masks of mood we so often feel obliged to wear for the world. As such, all are pieces which have a lot to say as we regard them.

Black Tulip Gallery, October 2024: Bamboo Barnes and Tess (Therese Carfagno)

Another aspect of the exhibition I like is the division between styles: colour images are located on the lower floor, and the monochrome pieces on the upper. This gives a subtle sense of the gallery hosting two smaller exhibitions, the pieces in each linked as much by this division in styles, with all of them – lower and upper – united by the core theme of the exhibition to form a whole.

Ideally curated and presented, Colours of Life is a further engaging exhibition in what is a series of such exhibitions hosted within an equally engaging space.

Black Tulip Gallery, October 2024: Christian Carter

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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The very human art of Tripp Foxtail in Second Life

Back Alley Art Gallery, September 2024: Tripp Foxtail

I recently made my first trip to the Back Alley Gallery, operated and curated by ZED (Zee Malus), racoon extraordinaire and Racoon Emperor of No Dumpire in which the gallery is located 🙂 . I was there to view a most extraordinary art exhibition by an artist I’m ashamed to say I had not previously come across in Second Life (at least not that I’m consciously aware of doing). That artist is Tripp Foxtail, and the Exhibition is the appropriately entitled The Very Human Art of Tripp Foxtail.

And when I say the art is extraordinary – I mean precisely that; it is simply and completely captivating in both content and production.

Within Second Life, Tripp is a multi-talented individual who likes to give of his time to others. He is a Second Life mentor, a builder (and inventor – you may have heard of his sobriquet, The Mysterious Mechanic), store owner, designer of public spaces such as Traveller Station, where one might set out on many travels across Second Life, and Diver’s Station, where people can travel to and between a number undersea public spaces (just dive into the water and hit the portals!). However, in the physical world, Tripp is first and foremost and exceptionally talented illustrator-artist.

Back Alley Art Gallery, September 2024: Tripp Foxtail
I’m a fine art illustrator, working on paper, canvas and digitally, employing a wide array of physical mediums including ink, acrylic paint, airbrush, pastel, photography and watercolour. I love experimenting with all kinds of processes like glass engraving, print making, and digital 3D Fractals.
I believe that human creativity is a sacred practice through which we may reach the numinous domain of the transcendent; therefore, AI is never used in the production of my art.

– Tripp Foxtail, describing his art

Within The Very Human Art, Tripp presents a fabulous walk through his artistry, including the likes of pen-and-ink illustrations, digital painting, fractal work, graphite drawings, pieces captured from within Second Life, and a presentation of how he has used his art in support of physical-world non-profits to help  raise awareness of multiple causes.

Back Alley Art Gallery, September 2024: Tripp Foxtail

The latter alone makes this exhibition a must see for anyone remotely interested in the power of art to communicate, featuring as it does samples of his Endangered Species Bookmark Collection created as a fundraiser for the World Wildlife Fund. It also offers further insight into Tripp’s nature and desire to help, support and encourage; in addition, it further adds to this being a very personal exhibition, something which can be seen through the additional graffiti-like commentary placed by Tripp on the walls of the gallery which explain some of his work and influences, and which carry quotes from other artists which might be side to reflect Tripp’s view of his art.

But what makes this exhibition so extraordinary is in the manner of presentation of the pieces; something which Tripp calls “optique”. In the very simplest of terms, it is the subtle layers of a piece. These might come is just a pair of images (one forming the “picture” and the second appearing to have been lighted “etched” on the “glass of the picture); other might be more more deeply layers, with individual layers perhaps differing in their contrast / transparency.

At first glance, this might cause the eye to respond with a feeling that the art isn’t quite in focus. However, when the camera is moved across an image, this layer brings an immediate sense of depth and life to it, to the point where it seems tactile in nature as well as presenting a unique sense of life and motion. In this, if you have a joystick or SpaceNav or similar you use with SL, I strongly recommend you use it to swing your camera across the pieces; for those no so fortunate, use of Alt-Cam to focus in a piece and then using the camera control to slide or swing the camera across it can offer a similar result.

Back Alley Art Gallery, September 2024: Tripp Foxtail

With a dip into Tripp’s fractal art – including nots on how he produces it – The Very Human Art is an exceptional exhibition which should be seen in order to be properly and fully appreciated. In this, I would recommend dropping in sooner rather than later, just in case. Whilst the invitation I received was posted to an in-world art group on September 20th, 2024, according to a notice at the entrance to the gallery the exhibition opened on August 31st, 2024. As exhibitions at the gallery appear to run for a month as a time, this could mean The Very Human Art is nearing the end of its time at the gallery; ergo, best to hop along now rather than miss it!

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Everlast: a cathedral dream in Second Life

SLEA – Everlast, by Gem Preiz, September 2024

Over a decade ago, I wrote about a stunning exhibition of fractal art entitled Cathedral Dreamer (see: Fractal dreams in Second Life). At the time, it was my first introduction to the artist’s work – although by no means his first installation within Second Life -, and the start of a wellspring of admiration I’ve had for his work ever since.

Long before AI became the “in thing” for artistic expression, the artist in question was working with software tools to produce the most amazing fractal pieces, genuine cathedrals, palaces – even cities – of the imagination modelled in 2D, together with magnificent vehicles and spacecraft. Nor did his creativity stop there; combining images with narrative and setting, his work came to weave together broad canvases of art, story and the imagination to take us both on journeys through space and time whilst giving us pause for thought.

SLEA – Everlast, by Gem Preiz, September 2024

Installations such as Heritage: Vestiges (January 2016, reviewed here), and its sequel, Heritage: Wrecks (May 2016, reviewed here), sought to allegorically and artistically ask us about how the past may have informed us in bequeathing structures and memories to us, and how we might in turn inform our descendants in  far future age in what we bequeath in terms of structures and edifices. He has also used his art to encourage us to explore aspects of philosophy (The Anthropic Principle, April 2017, reviewed here) and also moved into 3D builds and installations such as Skyscrapers (April 2020, reviewed here) and the fabulous Sapiens (January 2018, reviewed here), an exploring the nature of humanity and human society, and of consciousness and thought.

That artist is Gem Preiz, and the above is just to touch on his work in the years since my first encounter with Cathedral Dreamer. I mention it all intentionally, not because Gem really needs any introduction, but because he has opened a new installation within Second Life, which will remain in place for (I believe) around six months. It is a piece which – whilst far from being Gem’s last in SL, I’m sure – in many respects brings things somewhat “full circle”, returning o the theme through which I first encountered his work, as he noted to me when inviting me along to view the new installation:

Hello Inara. 10 years ago, you wrote a blog post about someone dreaming of cathedrals 🙂 . I finally managed to build one in 3D! It’s now visible “for real”, built in my way  [with] prims and minimal textures … I hope you will have time to visit.
SLEA – Everlast, by Gem Preiz, September 2024

And so it is that I jumped over to visit Everlast, a single installation of impressive size (28,913 Land Capacity and occupying a Full region leveraging the Lab’s Full region Land Capacity bonus) in which Gem has truly become the Cathedral Dreamer.

It’s a build that encompasses many signatures of his work, past and present: the use of prims over mesh; the minimalist use of colour which a focus on gold (which has been the colour of choice found within several of his more recent installations and exhibitions), the use of geometry and geometric forms which echo the geometry from which fractal grow, thus providing a subliminal link to his 2D fractal art (none of which is displayed here, an unusual move for Gem, but understandable given the overall LI of the installation) – and of course, his love for architectural design.

SLEA – Everlast, by Gem Preiz, September 2024

As a region-wide build, Everlast does require a fairly long draw distance to take it all in from the outside, but this can be stepped down own inside the main structure, if required. Those running on non-PBR viewers should also ensure that the Advanced Lighting Model (ALM – Preferences → Graphics) is enabled in their viewer for the best viewing experience, and if you’re able to do so, Shadows should be enabled – although these are not strictly required in terms of general viewing.

The build itself really comprises four elements – the surround, with its little pyramid structures; the  covered cloister-like walks surrounding the main build, the garden between these “cloisters” and the main structure, and the soaring beauty of the cathedral-like main structure in the centre. The geometry expressed throughout all of these elements draws everything together and becomes marvellously obvious when the entire installation is seen from above. It is also something visible within the cathedral itself through inlaid floor patterns, the lines of columns and – most particularly –  the floor designs themselves.

SLEA – Everlast, by Gem Preiz, September 2024

Ultra-modern in appearance, the cathedral nevertheless harkens back to the great Norman cathedrals in multiple subtle ways whilst also looking to the future. Its minimalist styling – plan white walls with gold coloured elements given both an impression of newest and, conversely, great age, marking the installation a beautifully timeless. In this, the outlying pyramids also add a sense of age, recalling as they do past civilisations. There is also a sense the building is incomplete: seating is scarce, the walls unadorned, etc. But again, as Gem notes in his introduction to the installation, this is intentional:

Some things don’t ever last long, others are everlasting. Some deserve to be forgotten, others deserve a shrine.
“Everlast” is a build which was meant to never be finished. Winter froze it in its whiteness and shades of gold.

Of of this makes for a place not only of artistic expression which has been beautifully conceived and executed, but also of personal contemplation and reflection. It’s is an installation not only to be seen, but experienced. As such, I recommend Everlast for your appreciation. Do go visit.

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