Posts Tagged ‘sl’

Black Box

Monday, December 7th, 2009

I participate at New Berlin Art Festival with a black box, when clicked it links to Call for EULA’s.

It’s an open show in Second Life, set up by Jan Northoff. Art in virtual worlds’s is a bit like art in Denmark, where art in the last decade have been politicized as nationalist norm. In the series of talks under Boom Pearls Northoff talked about his work as building. He sort of stopped making art after leaving the american desert and began working in 3D simulations. Now he understands art as context. I think it’s a point that you can see practice in a vw as something particular but it is still part of reality.

The Boom Pearls talks about art online didn’t create a real dialogue with other digital artists who thinks presence online as participation in these places leave less space for critical work. The different points of view are nuanced and related to different art projects. Maybe it’s not the time to make a dialogue between these types of work, it’s  different categories sometimes.

My initiative with Boom Pearls was intended to point to how virtual worlds can be a platform for art, also for artists new to social real time simulations in 3D. It seems to be crucial that geographic limits can be even harder to deal with in virtual worlds. It’s is simply too hard for someone to make it into a virtual place. Their computer or the network infrastructure might not live up to the standards. Still, artists who do not stay in a vw can use it as a temporary play ground, and play with the new possibilities, based on their artworld experience. My work is then sort of supporting link’s between different contexts and the inworld driven economy of these server park playgrounds.

Registration Unavailable by Gillion Grantsaan in Second Life

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Boom Pearls presented Gillion Grantsaan & Sabbabas in Second Life september 10. He has done a project together with a group of musicians from Ghana. He learned how difficult it was to use Second Life as a place to meet and work together across geographical borders. For his project, it was easier to bring all the musicians to Europe, though they all spend a lot of time in front of their computers. Organizing an art project was also about building up a story about the participants. He did that with a series of collages, texts, songs and a music video, seen below here.

At Boom Pearls homepage there’s a recording of Gillion Grantsaan describing the project, and a press release. The show was the last in the series running over two years, and a pdf with a presentation of the project was presented at the opening.

I Grow All Kinds of Flowers, Seimi Nørregaard at Boom Pearls

Monday, June 8th, 2009

youtube version

This is a video from the installation, which was available until May 30, 2009, at Boom Pearls in Second Life. More information about the project boompearls.com/?page_id=493.

Antonia Low, ROLLBOCKZWILLING at Boom Pearls

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Thursday March 26 Antonia Low‘s project ROLLBOCKZWILLING, kreisend, opened in Second Life at Boom Pearls and at Campusin3D at the same time. Again realized in collaboration with NewBerlin.

Antonia Low makes these fantastic scaffoldings. As stated in the press release, i also think they have this quality of of ambiguity, because they are more than one thing at a time, interieur, architecture, art and now circling in 3D.  In that sense there’some play about the project in Boom Pearls, as something with more than one meaning.

It was a really nice opening. Matti Blinker played music from his and Slinky Kiergartens livingroom. The avatars started dancing and luckily one from NewBerlin had brought a dancefloor, which had better dances than our own.

Endless Structure, Pernille With Madsen at Boom Pearls

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Saturday March 14 Pernille With Madsens project for Boom Pearls, Endless Structure opened in Second Life. The project was created in collaboration with NewBerlin, Jan Northoff  helped to connect to a scripter, who worked with some of the latest technology in scripting in SL.

The video below is from the opening. First theres a simple drawing at the ground, then it turns into a hole which draws avatars around inside, and then it the hole goes back to drawing state, before it goes upwards and turns into a building and with a hole turning up in one of the walls. Since its 3D it doesn’t go on, that’s not possible. So it loops endlessly.

Pernilles projects is about vertigo. Here it worked through the avatar, and the avatars pulled into the hole lost control in an unexpected way, though they might have read the press release. The french sociologist who wrote on play, Roger Caillois defined one way of playing as searching for vertigo, or ilinx. Since its also about using an avatar, the practice of the audience is also about playing a role, so theres a bit more to it than vertigo, eg mimicry, in relatation to audience patterns as suggested by Chris Bateman. Read more about Pernille With Madsen at her homepage, and at BoomPearls.com.


Endless Structure from jon paludan on Vimeo.

Gitte Broeng at Boom Pearls

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Yesterday there was an opening on Gitte Broengs project Dessert Room at Boom Pearls in Second Life.

Documentation of the installation and a press release is available at Boom Pearls project homepage.

Kulturnyt

Friday, December 19th, 2008

Yesterday i was shortly interviewed in the danish radioprogram kulturnyt. In relation to the support my project Boom Pearls has been granted by the danish art council, to discuss art in Second Life, Tore Leifer asked me how i think SL is suitable to make art in today.

SL was thought dead by many after it had a big burst in the media starting two years ago. Its difficult for institutions like museums to be flexible and do projects initiated on their own. A lot of people still make art in there. Some are integrated as inhabitants while others more use it as a tool and tend to think more about how the project may work out in Real Life. Projects like New Berlin create a model of Berlin in 1:1. The last project in Boom Pearls by Tommy Støckel was an installation consisting of a large number of objects made by the inhabitants. This way he states that he does not make art in SL based on RL. While Boom Pearls invites artists new in SL it would be interesting to discus this starting point with others.

Boom Pearls

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

Press Release: “Primitives Collection Field” – an installation by Tommy Støckel

in Second Life as second part of the Boom Pearls series at http://slurl.com/secondlife/Phyllira/169/139/90

Opening online December 20th, 19:00 – 20:30 GMT +01.

With the invitation to exhibit in Second Life Tommy Støckel has seen the opportunity to work in a Land Art format that under normal circumstances would be difficult to do in Real Life. Støckel has for a long time been working with accumulating simple geometric shapes to form complex abstract sculptures, and he has always seen the computer generated 3D object as an important point of reference. From a distance his sculptures resemble virtual objects, but at a closer look these sculptures have an obviously handcrafted quality using materials such as paper and cardboard.

Second Life is a new frontier to Støckel – a world where certain restrictions in our normal world are non-existent, and where new opportunities for artwork come into existence. The artist’s usual, not very weather consistent, materials would under normal circumstances be impossible to work with outdoors, but in this parallel world the single avatar has quite another control over nature: Objects can be made out of nothing and the landscape can be manipulated to suit the owner’s individual taste.

With the project “Primitives Collection Field” Støckel has chosen to work with a sort of virtual Land Art – an otherwise problematic genre to him. He has covered Boom Pearl’s piece of land with geometric objects that have all been arranged in relation to the Second Life grid, which defines that entire world in metric measurements.

Primitives Collection Field” consists of approximately 1,100 prims – or primitives – that have been made by disassembling a large number of freebies, and thereby reducing them to their simplest geometric parts. These are shapes, which one could call the building stones of Second Life, and which everything is build from. Freebies are free objects accessible to everyone that finds them, and Støckel prefers to use these free accessible objects in Second Life as his working material. Along with the Second Life grid, these modeled objects are an important part of the world, and Tommy Støckel thinks that a project in such a specific world demands that you relate to, and to work with, what is given in this particular world.

The installation can be seen until the 24th of February 2008.

Read more about Boom Pearls at www.boompearls.com

Best regards

Jon Paludan