Of ambient art and large calibre handguns

The Linden Endowments for the Arts is hosting a series of 16 “interim” art projects through until the end of January 2013. I’ve already covered a number of them – see the related links at the end of this piece – and here I turn my attention to the installations by Asmita  Duranjaya  and Maikelkey Resident and by Martini Discovolante and Marion Questi.

Tales of the Future  – LEA25

Tales of the Future  - LEA25
Tales of the Future – LEA25

Tales of the future is a joint piece by Asmita  Duranjaya  and Maikelkey Resident which presents “5 immersive environments of 5 ambient études”, together with a live performance space.

Asmita has been immersed in art since her childhood, seeing it s a way to express her emotions and communicate in a non-verbal way. She works in a range of genres, including still-life, portraiture and surrealism, as well as producing applied art such as book covers, event posters, etc. More recently she has become increasingly involved in the medium of digital art using a tablet and pen. Within SL, her work has been presented at a number of venues, and she has her own exhibition space at Space 4 Art, where she exhibits both her own work and the work of other SL artists. At LEA25, she has produced the immersive environments.

Maikelkey is actually the digital persona of German science-fiction author, writer, translator and composer Michael K. Iwoleit. As well as being a published author in his own right, he is the co-founder of the German science-fiction magazine Nova and the international SF magazine InterNova. He has translated works by Iain M. Banks, Cory Doctorow, Sean Williams, Chris Moriarty and David Wingrove, among others. At LEA25, he is responsible for the 5 ambient études.

LEA25-2_001
Tales of the Future – LEA25

Traditionally, an étude is a short instrumental musical composition of considerable complexity designed to help perfect a particular musical skill. It’s a technique that will certainly be well-known to those who have been formally taught the piano, although it is by no means restricted to that particular instrument.  Here, the use of the term is somewhat broader,  the pieces on offer seeking to present a specific atmosphere or mood.

All five of the ambient environments are located in the sky and reached via anywhere door-style teleports located around the edge of the ground-level performance area. Each has a short description of the piece over the door, which will carry you to the environment when clicked. Once there, and with the exception of one of the environments, you’ll be asked to activate the required étude by following a web link. There are interactive elements to some of the environments, so keep an eye out for poseballs and hovertext when visiting them.

Tales of the Future  - LEA25
Tales of the Future – LEA25

The use of web links is perhaps a little less than perfect, at least to me, as they form an intrusion into four the immersive aspects of the build, as the visitor either has to swap between viewer and browser to start the associated étude, or (if using the viewer’s built-in browser), have a floater open which then blocks a fair portion of the in-world view. Both of these points left me wondering why each of the ambient environments couldn’t have been presented within its own parcel, with the étude streamed into it for a more seamless  immersive feel.

The performance area itself sits within a “depression” in the centre of a rocky landscape bathed in a suitably blue sci-fi like light and covered by a blue dome. Anti-grav chairs together with poseballs provide room for the audience to hover (or float) before a  small stage area. The latter will be used for live performances by – I assume  – Maikelkey Resident. The first of these, at 14:00 on Saturday January 19th, will be a reading. The second, at 14:00 on Sunday January 19th, will be a musical presentation.

Continue reading “Of ambient art and large calibre handguns”

Looking through an artist’s eyes and discovering flying in SL

The Linden Endowments for the Arts is hosting a series of 16 “interim” art projects through until the end of January 2013. I’ve already covered the Flash Mob event on LEA26 and LEA 27, and both The Wonderful World of Particles and Paper Observatory, which are displayed at LEA13 and LEA21 respectively, as well as the installations created by Frankx Lefavre and Thea Dee. In this item, I drop in to the regions provided to Fuschia Nightfire and Natascha Randt.

Fuschia Nightfire, “Fuschia’s Collection” – LEA22

Fuschia Nightfire - LEA22
Fuschia Nightfire – LEA22

“Since I first joined SL I have collected art from other SL artists, but never had a space to show these works,” Fuschia Nightfire says of her installation at LEA22, “So I decided to use my LEA sim to do this.”

The result is a chance to see SL art through the eyes of one of the platform’s foremost artists as Fuschia offers-up a display of some of her favourite piece of art she’s collected over the years, as well as pieces she’s collaborated upon with others. On display are sculptures, 2D art, paintings, static pieces, interactive pieces all from the likes of Rose Borchovski, Baron Grayson, Soror Nishi,  Light Waves and more.

Fuschia Nightfire - LEA22
Fuschia’s Collection – LEA22

The design of the region is simple and elegant: to one side of the region sits a gallery featuring paintings, drawings and a number of 3D pieces, which stands alongside a couple of other buildings which are there to be explored. Paths from here wind out over the water to a large sculpture on one side and a floral garden on the other, on which is set-out further items for the visitor to admire. More art can be found out on the water itself, most close to the footpaths – but do keep an eye out for the scattering of Light Waves’ brilliant Greenies.

Fuschia Nightfire - LEA22
Fuschia’s Collection – LEA22

To ensure the eye isn’t too distracted by things going on around the region, Fuschia has erected a set of walls surrounding the installation which an image of the sky, forming the perfect backdrop to the exhibit and allowing the photographer to cleanly capture items on display.

Fuschia Nightfire - LEA22
Fuschia’s Collection – LEA22

This is a great way for those unfamiliar with the scope of SL art to dip a toe in the water without getting heavily into anything and gain a little familiarity with works by some well-known names.

Recommended.

Continue reading “Looking through an artist’s eyes and discovering flying in SL”

Of light and glass and picturing Second Life

The Linden Endowments for the Arts is hosting a series of 16 “interim” art projects through until the end of January 2013. I’ve already covered the Flash Mob event on LEA26 and LEA 27, and both The Wonderful World of Particles and Paper Observatory, which are displayed at LEA13 and LEA21 respectively. Here I pay a visit to two more of the installations, created by Frankx Lefavre and Thea Dee.

Frankx LeFavre – LEA19

Frankx Lefarve at LEA19
Frankx Lefarve at LEA19

“I  build  at night,” Frankx Lefavre explained during my visit to his installation at LEA19, “And no, I’m not  a vampire! I see the light better in the dark.”

Speaking as one who likes to play with scripted lighting effects in the darkness of SL’s night, I understand exactly where he is coming from; the interplay of light and dark has always been fascinating to many people from earliest times – right from when humans first looked in awe  at the night sky with its myriad of stars and started to wonder as to their meaning.

Frankx Lefarve at LEA19
Frankx Lefarve at LEA19

Awe is the emotional response one has with Frankx’s build. While it has no formal name, in talking to me about it, Frankx used the term “light and glass” – and it is altogether an appropriate description of this piece. At its centre is a beautiful, towering sculpture of light and glass set against the backdrop of a starless night (do make sure you accept the region’s windlight on arrival or set your viewer to midnight. you might also want to set your draw distance to around the 400 metre mark). Surrounding this at ground level and on platforms reached by beautiful stairways or floating in the air on their own, are a series of sculptures and set pieces for the visitor to discover.

No descriptive note card is provided for the installation, and there is no clear way down from the elevated arrival point. both of these are intentional, the aim being for the visitor to explore the build as they please, on foot and by flying, and to form their own ideas and opinions about and on it. “It is what it is,” as Frankx said to me: it is what our imaginations see.

Frankx Lefavre - LEA19
Frankx Lefavre – LEA19

And there is much to see here – far more than may first seem to be the case. Prims, sculpts, particles are all are used to tremendous effect, both as a part of the whole installation and as individual set pieces and focal points within and around it. Movement plays an important, if subtle role as well, both within in individual sculptures, many of which have their own moving elements, and within the larger build, such as through the cloud-like sheets of glass and light which scud across the sky.

This is very much a design where words and photographs are simply not enough; it is an installation which should be visited and experienced. Recommended.

Thea Dee – LEA18

Thea Dee LEA18
Thea Dee LEA18

Thea Dee has been a resident of Second Life since 2011 and has established a reputation as a photographer who creates striking images of Second Life using minimal post-processing for the most part.

The  installation at LEA18 is an exhibition of Thea’s work in capturing many memorable images from the very diverse nature of regions and builds across Second Life. These are offered to the visitor in a very simple, but highly effective environment comprising an oval wall around the region, passing through a series of simple wooden structures – pavilions, if you will – in which thea’s work is displayed in groups of six.

Thea Dee LEA18
Thea Dee LEA18

Thea’s work is always eye-catching, and the design and layout of this installation allows the visitor to enjoy it to the fullest, and it makes an ideal place to visit if you simply want to wander an enjoy the sights of Second Life through the eyes of a creative photographer and artist.

Make sure you take the note card at the arrival point – it will point you to more of Thea’s work in-world.

Thea Dee LEA18
Thea Dee LEA18

Related Links

Ole Etzel reveals the secrets of Machinima

ole-2

Have you ever wondered how to make machinima? (Yes!). Have you ever given it a go and been less that satisfied? (Yes!). Not even sure what this “machinima” thing is? Ole Etzel – aka Mr. Bones will be on-hand to answer these questions and more as he sits down to present a practical workshop on the subject which promises to cover everything from capturing things in-world through editing and post-production.

Notes for his own series of Mr. Bones videos and recently the focus of The Drax Files, Ole also promises to give more insight into In the Belly of the Whale, which he is co-running with Eupalinos Ugajin at Moving Islands [Rafts] at LEA20.

"Lights, camera ..." The workshop area
“Lights, camera …” The workshop area

Things kick-off at 12:00 noon SLT. The workshop area can be reached via the LEA20 arrival point. Look for the workshop poster (top), and the treasure chest beneath it. Click on the latter for a teleport to the workshop area (the direct TP may not work).

And here’s one of my favourite Mr. Bones music videos.

Related Links

Of particles and paper

The Linden Endowments for the Arts is hosting a series of 16 “interim” art projects through until the end of January 2013. I’ve already covered the Flash Mob event on LEA26 and LEA 27, so here are two more you might want to take a look at: The Wonderful World of Particles and Paper Observatory.

The Wonderful World of Particles

The Wonderful World of Particles
The Wonderful World of Particles – LEA 13

I’ve long been an admirer of particle-based art in Second Life, having first encountered the power and versatility of particles as an artistic medium through the works of Tyrehl Byk, who still stands as one of the great Particle Magicians in my humble view of Second Life. So when I discovered that Mary Wickentower would be using LEA13 to present The Wonderful World of Particles (sponsored by Aview TV), I knew it would be on my list of places to visit.

The Wonderful World of Particles
The Wonderful World of Particles – LEA 13

Open until the end of January 2013, the region comprises a number of areas in which the beauty of particles can be seen. The largest of these is Le Musee de Particules, which will be used for particle performances throughout the month, as well as displaying various exhibits relating to particles, such as a photography by Particle Tom. Around this can be found a particle art installation by Lexi Marshdevil, a drive-in movie theatre featuring particle-themed films by Mary Wickentower and featuring the work of noted particle artists, and a “particle garden” by Danya Sadofsky.

Shows will be held throughout the month, including one by Particle Tom which will take place on Sunday January 19th at 13:00 SLT, featuring music by Jed Luckless.

Take your time exploring; there are some interest displays to be seen – and you might want to have a little place with windlight to get the full visual impact from Lexi Marshdevil’s piece outside of the museum.

The keen-eared movie buff with a penchant for  “Spaghetti Westerns” might also enjoy an aural treat inside the museum with some familiar chimes central to a story involving Clint Eastwood, Lee van Cleef and Gian Maria Volonté!

The Paper Observatory

Haveit Neox is at work on LEA-21 is what is very much a work-in-progress. Paper Observatory is eventually designed to eventually replace a four-year-old Paper Tower on his ACC Alpha region, and which houses the visitor centre and galleries.

Paper Observatory
Paper Observatory

“The new Paper Observatory on the LEA21 sim hovers above an ample arena. The city leading up to this build is concentric; rooftops conforming into one large sweep of concavity, suggests a satellite dish.” Haveit says of the piece, before going on to describe more of the structure of the build and the people within. The human activities on the streets of the city are reflective of superstitious times of old, in the days before science had given us a measure of enlightenment, and when the Earth was still thought to be flat and disease the visitation of evil spirits.

Overhead, the observatory floats serenely, the only way to reach it being via flight – and this is intentional, Haveit using flight as an analogy of turning the page to move beyond the past and into the realm of the present, where the observatory will “be connected to science and therefore be a venue where one could gather information and get in touch with thought-provoking theories.”

Paper Observatory
Paper Observatory

Within the structure of the observatory one can find images of Lawrence Krauss, Richard Feynmann, Isaac Newton and Neil de Grasse Tyson (whose television continuation of Sagan’s epic Cosmos I am eagerly awaiting) – and possibly more as the build progresses – which form interactive elements designed to get the grey cells working.

As the Paper Observatory will be under development and enhancement throughout the month, this is an installation one may well want to re-visit at least a few times to more fully get its entire measure. The completed build will be installed on ACC Alpha on Thursday April 10th, 2014, the fourth anniversary of the founding of the original Paper Tower.

Paper Observatory
Paper Observatory

Related Links

“Me Kikas, you Marma” encore performance

LaPiscean Liberty prompted me indirectly about an encore performance by Marmaduke Arado and Kikas Babenco of their long-running and high-enjoyable show, The Extraordinary Adventures of Kikas & Marmaduke, which features the latest installment: “Me Kikas, you Marma”.

Using the tableaux vivants approach, The Extraordinary Adventures of Kikas & Marmaduke has charted the adventures of the two protagonists as they explore Second Life since around 2010. Along the way, it has provided a high level of amusement for audiences while showcasing the creative potential of the platform.

Marmaduke warms-up in rehearsals while Kikas retains her calm poise
Marmaduke warms-up in rehearsals while Kikas retains her calm poise

In the pieces, best considered 3D graphic novels, Marmaduke is the fearless traveler who unflinchingly throws himself into every situation, regardless of the consequences, determined to explore and face-down dangers, leaving Kikas in the unenviable situation of having to be saviour whilst also striving to keep her elegance intact and her wardrobe fresh!

The encore performance is being hosted by KG Shine Productions at their theatre on LEA2, and will commence at 15:00 SLT on Wednesday January 8th. This is not one to be missed, so get there early to ensure you have a seat; and be ready to participate, as the audience is encouraged to discuss the show as it progresses!

The
The KG Shine Productions theatre at LEA2