Lazarus Doghouse visited my
studio for this ‘unplugged’ recording of him performing one of my favourite songs
by him.
I’ll have a lot more
to say about this film in a future post dealing with post-production and colour
correction but in the meantime, please enjoy ‘Lazarus Doghouse – Discovery’ in
720HD:Pixie Rain: straddling Art and Porn in Second Life. Some of the machinima and blog-posts on this site are adult in nature and contain scenes that some people may find disturbing. If you feel this might be you, please exit now. Other elements are warm and cuddly and have a "feel good" factor. Click the "Film Link" tab below for all my films listed chronologically.
Tuesday, 25 December 2012
Tuesday, 20 November 2012
Machinima Expo: 'Unfinished Paintings'
Klute tries every porta-loo at Burn2 2012 |
I now have the details for
Miron Lockett’s marvellous iClone
created ‘Unfinished Paintings’ and, as
promised, have embedded it below.
This machinima won the 4th
Jury Prize at last weekend’s Machinima Expo and, additionally, was
awarded the much valued ‘Audience Choice’ award.
I love it. Klute, I have a
feeling that you will too!
The Machinima Expo was a
great, well-organised event which took a lot of work by lots of
people. Discoveries like this machinima, made outside of SL, open my eyes to
various new possibilities. This may well
be the single most important contribution that the Expo contributes to the new
genre of machinima.
Sunday, 18 November 2012
Machinima Expo: A Good Day at the Races!
Tutsy, Pixie & Nitro backstage at Machinima Expo Award Ceremony |
This year’s Machinima Expo
has just concluded – it was a good day at the races!
Of the six major awards,
Tutsy’s films were awarded three.
The final results are:
The
“Open This End” Award for outstanding film making
was awarded equally to three films:
- The Chapelside Deception by IceAxe (UK ,
Moviestorm)
The 1st and 2nd Jury
Prizes were awarded to:
- The
Last Syllable of Recorded Time by Tutsy Navarathna
The 3rd Jury Prize was
awarded to:
- Wulf
and Eadwacer by Hypatia Pickens
The 4th Jury Prize was
awarded to:
- Unfinished
Paintings by Miron Lockett (US , iClone)
The Grand Prize Winning Film was
awarded to:
If you get the chance, I’d especially
recommend watching Miron Locket’s ‘Unfinished
Paintings’. This is a great, fun high-tone production made in iClone by a
clearly extremely talented guy, musically and visually. Unfortunately I haven’t
been able to locate the film on the net to embed here, but when I do I will.
Hypatia Pickens’ ‘Wulf and Eadwacer’ is based on an Old
English poem and has a great rhythm and beat. Definitely worth watching.
‘The Chapelside Deception’ by IceAxe is a more conventional narrative
film consisting of “a beginning, middle and end”. Created using MovieStorm, it
tells the story of corruption in a soccer team during the 1970s.
As part of the Expo, Tutsy
was asked to produce a video interview based on questions supplied by Ricky
Grove. I provided the translation from French to English.
For the first time, we can now
release that interview publically.
Enjoy it best in 720 or
1080HD!
Tuesday, 6 November 2012
'Fwd:Evolution' - Machinima of the Month
I have just been informed that the Linden
Endowment for the Arts (LEA) have selected my ‘Fwd: Evolution’ as Second Life’s ‘Machinima of the Month’ for November 2012!
I am really chuffed and can think of no better excuse for
embedding it again here!
(‘Change Quality’ to 720 HD)
Sunday, 4 November 2012
'MetaSex' Nominated for MachinmaExpo 2012!
‘MetaSex’ and ‘The Last Syllable of Recorded Time’ by
Tutsy Navarathna have both been selected as MachinimaExpo 2012 Jury Nominated films!
They will go into competition against eight other films, with the results
announced in mid-November.
As mentioned before, what is interesting and significant about the
MachinimaExpo Jury Nominated competition is that film entries can come *from*
any digital platform, not just Second Life. This year sees five entries from
SL, three created using Moviestorm
and two using iClone.
Here is the list of nominees and links to the films (where I
have been able to find them).
- The Chapelside Deception by IceAxe (UK , Moviestorm)
- The Great Bug War by Damien Valentine (UK/US, Moviestorm)
- The Last Syllable of Recorded Time by Tutsy Navarathna (France/India,
Second Life)
- Wulf and Eadwacer by Hypatia Pickens (US, Second
Life)
- The Urban Explorer’s Guide to Losing Yourself by theBiz (US , iClone)
- Parlant sans Languettes by Joe Zazulak (US, Second Life)
- MetaSex by Tutsy Navarathna (France/India, Second Life)
- The Four Gods of Folly by Hypatia Pickens (US, Second
Life)
- Libre Arbitre by Olivier Romme (France,
Moviestorm)
- Unfinished Paintings by Miron Lockett (US , iClone)
Over the next week I’ll get around to watching all ten films
and, although I wish each entrant the very best, it is admittedly somewhat difficult for
me to be anything but biased.
And on that confessional note, let us yet again take the
time to immerse ourselves in the glorious light that is ‘MetaSex’ :
Monday, 22 October 2012
Machinima Expo 2012: Official Trailer
November sees the opening of this year’s MachinimaExpo. What is particularly significant
about the MachinimaExpo is that film entries come from many different games and
MMOGs, not just Second Life.
Of the hundreds of entries, a 5-person jury panel selects
just ten to go forward into competition against each other. The names of the ten
selected machinima will be released later this week.
Last year I attended the Expo and blogged the experience here. It was a really very enjoyable
evening. As I said at the time, the real eye-opener was realising just how much
great machinima is being created outside of SL. The ten nominated films last
year included, for example, entries created in Grand Theft Auto and Pro Evolution
Soccer. The eventual winner, Phil Browne’s adaptation of the HP Lovecraft's classic ‘The Haunter of the Dark’ was created
using iClone.
It would, of course, be remiss of me not to drop in here
that Tutsy’s ‘A Journey Into the Metaverse’ was
awarded second place.
If last year is anything to go by, the ten nominated films
will be of exceptional quality. Personally I would have been proud to have
created any one of the ten! We’ll know the ten soon, and I can’t wait to watch
them…
In the meantime, here is the official trailer for this year’s
MachinimaExpo:
The Official 2012 Machinima Expo Trailer from Ricky Grove on Vimeo.
Sunday, 21 October 2012
Modelling The Erotic in Second Life
“There is a connection
between art and sex, with arousal in one realm speaking to arousal in another.”
– Laura Jacobs
Bethi
Catteneo and Arelus
Maximus have created these marvelous erotic
sculptures.
Both sculptures depict group sex scenes and are made from
mesh. Needless to say, a mesh-compatible viewer is required to see them.
This is a great combination of art and sex and I’d love to
see more work of this type in Second Life.
Congrats to both artists on these brilliant creations.
Saturday, 20 October 2012
Burn2 2012: No Bystanders!
“There
are no bystanders!”
- Burning Man and Burn2
Saturday 20th October sees the opening of this
year’s Burn2 festival in Second Life. Burn2 is
the virtual world equivalent of the RL Burning Man festival held in the Nevada desert and where
Philip Linden received inspiration to create Second Life itself.
Burn2 is a week long celebration of community, art and fire
culminating in the burning of ‘The Man’ and ‘The Temple’ on 27 and
28 October, respectively. The theme this year is ‘Fertility’.
Late Thursday night (GMT) a number of other bloggers and I were
given the opportunity to have an advanced look around before today’s official
opening. Now, it has to be said that the hour we were given was not nearly
enough to take in the hundreds of different builds on the six regions devoted
to the festival. But it is enough to get the taste and feel of this year’s
playa and take a few snaps.
As is my way, I wandered around aimlessly and studiously
ignored the site map we were supplied with. I had a vague notion that I wanted
to visit ‘The Man’ and ‘The Temple’ and look out for a WOW-factor build. The
pictures on this blog-post come from Thursday’s exploring.
I‘ll be returning often during the week to drink-in the
40-odd live performers, 50-odd DJ’s and especially visiting the art
installations of this year’s five invited artists: Silene Christen, Pallina60 Loon, Nexuno Thespian, Ub Yif and Fuchsia Nightfire.
Last year I had the pleasure of observing Debbie Trilling and Aleeta Zelin over a number of weeks as
they built, scripted and tested their ‘Man’ installation for 2011. I was asked
to take the official photographs for promotional
purposes. The final 15 min performance was one of the most dramatic and exciting scripted
installations I have ever seen in SL (watch the video below; ‘Change Quality’
to HD for best results).
This year ‘The Man’ is closely modeled on
the RL equivalent at Burning Man. It is a collaborative build which
included input from the RL Man team. The inner structure – called ‘the pistil’
– is constructed from mesh and therefore requires a mesh-compatible viewer to
see it.
I
am very much looking forward to this year’s Man burn on the 27 Oct, one of
the highlights of the festival.(click pics to see full size) |
The Man 2012 |
‘The Temple’ is the spiritual center of
the playa – the heart and the soul of the festival. In contradistinction to
‘The Man’ installation, no attempt has been made to replicate the RL equivalent
– it is a unique Second Life installation especially created for Burn2. Another
of the Burn2 highlights is the burning of ‘The Temple’ which takes place on 28
Oct.
The Temple 2012 |
The individual installation which grabbed my
attention during Thursday’s tour was created by Ultraviolet
Alter. This has a real “wow-factor” and although I have
embedded a few pics of it here, it really is worth seeking out to see for
yourself.
Created by Ultraviolet |
As I wandered around the playa it soon became apparent that
not all of the builds have a “wow-factor”. Indeed, some are very simple, some
are utilitarian, others’ are psychedelic and/or rather garish. There were even
a number which I couldn't make head nor tail of.
But that is hardly the point. The point is that hundreds of
SL residents have joined together to create a six-region community festival,
despite recent adversities that threatened to end it entirely. Anyone who
wished to had the opportunity to get themselves a parcel and simply build and
create.
One of foremost joys of Burn2 for me is seeing people simply
participate in whatever way they wish to participate. Burn2 is a healthy
antidote to the “I Just Stand Here” crowd who infest many of Second Life’s
otherwise enjoyable venues.
And that is why one of the key slogans of Burning Man and
Burn2 is:
“There
are no bystanders!”
Pixie xx
Tuesday, 16 October 2012
'The Monster Mash': A Halloween Special
Only a few short few weeks ago while discussing the historical,
philosophical and spiritual significance of Halloween I asked Tutsy, “Have you
ever heard the song, ‘Monster Mash’?”
“Nein, ma chérie une gousse de vanille mûre” he replied,
reverting to his native Language of Love, “Tell me more...”
“Oh, you simply must!” I squeal as I paste him the link to
the 1960's hit by Bobby ‘Boris’ and the CryptKickers.
Tutsy watches the video while I feed the Indian Internet
mice small pieces of Wensleydale and cranberry cheese.
“Mein gott!” he exclaims at the end, “A Masterpiece! I will make a movie of this for Halloween!”
“YES!”
“Merci, ma muse prune fraises dodues. I will start
immediately!”
He teleports off, spending the next week exploring for
locations, filming and editing…
And here it is...Please be upstanding for Tutsy Navarathna’s latest
machinima, ‘The Monster Mash’ (best
in HD quality, click ‘Change Quality’ button):
‘Monster Mash’ was
filmed on a number of SL ‘Halloween’ regions but two in particular – ‘Enchantment Island’ owned by BambiTwice
Nitely and ‘The HAUNTED MANSION at Nevermore Estate’
owned by Tosha Bergan and Brendan Macarthur deserve special mention for providing us with such fun,
laughter and great photographic and filming opportunities.
I
would heartily recommend both as part of your Second Life Halloween
celebrations.Pixie xx
Sunday, 14 October 2012
Susa Bubble: The Rise of 'Falling'
Congratulations to Iono
Allen whose machinima ‘Falling’
(embedded below) has been chosen for screening at this year’s Festival du Nouveau Cinéma de Montréal.
This is a significant achievement by any standard. Over
160,000 people attend this prestigious festival each year and it is also one of
the qualifying festivals for the Academy
Award for Short Films.
‘Falling’ depicts a
chapter in the life of Susa Bubble, the central sadly beautiful character in
many of Rose
Borchoski’s Second Life installations. We have blogged Rose’s
work before of course; once almost exactly a year ago as part of the ‘The Path’ and again more recently with her
‘The Inevitability of Fate’ installation.
‘Falling’ records
how Susa is now
broken in so many ways that her personality has spilt into 33 different complexes.
Susa no longer
knows who she really is and consequently is falling…
When Iono originally released this machinima in March 2012,
I commented on the YT page “beautiful and
moving”. It remains so for me today.
Congrats and good luck to Iono, Rose and of course Susa !
Monday, 8 October 2012
SaveMe Oh - A Retrospective
“Give
me hot or give me cold – just never give me tepid.”
-Trad.
prob. derived from Revelations 3:16
SaveMe Oh Retrospective by SaveMe Oh |
SaveMe Oh is one of the
most interesting and unique artists currently working in Second Life. She
herself is not however easily categorised, and neither is her work – if indeed
the two can in fact be split.
She has been ejected and banned from more SL regions, art
galleries and installations than anyone else I can think of.
SaveMe has, among her other talents, an unerring ability
to piss people off.
Although SaveMe is a prolific filmmaker, a creator of
in-world installations and a performance-artist of some repute it is probably fair
to say that, actually, it is “SaveMe Oh” herself that is the “artwork”. And I
don’t say that lightly; I am quite aware how trite and clichéd it may sound.
SaveMe’s mere presence always causes an effect – sometimes
hot, sometimes cold – but never tepid. I have been at a number of exhibitions
where worried curators have in hushed whispers asked, “Is SaveMe
Oh coming?” More often than not their ban hammer is primed and ready.
And make no mistake - there is no doubt that SaveMe’s
presence can be disruptive; there is no doubt she is capable of being wicked, even
cruel; and there is also no doubt she is openly critical of other artists.
But despite this – perhaps even *because* of this – her work
always carries with it a sense of humour and fun…so long as you yourself are
not the target!
I first met SaveMe – and I wouldn’t expect her to remember
this – but I first met her at an AM Radio installation, no less, when I’d
only been in SL a few months. At this particular installation it was possible
to “spray paint” graffiti onto the side of a railway locomotive. I was there to
film a sequence for No Self Control; SaveMe was there for her
own nefarious reasons. We both wanted to use the spray-paint tool at the same
time. SaveMe graciously let me go first. I studied her profile, as I do most
anyone who comes into my range, and found my way to her films
and blog. I have to say, it took me a while to “get it” and actually
enjoy what she is doing. Over the last 2+ years I have had long discussions
about her work with Iono Allen and Tutsy Navarathna, both of whom respect what she is doing; I have also watched many of her films and also attending her installations and performance
art.
As recognition of her work, AviewTV are currently running a retrospective of SaveMe’s machinima. The venue, like SaveMe herself, is larger-than-life, fun and utterly
uncompromising.
I spent two hours there on Sunday evening and will return
again during the week. Her movies are streamed to various “screens” of all
shapes and sizes. It was very enjoyable and I recommend it.
I had seen many of SaveMe’s films before. Some of the films
contain nudity, many are provocative or controversial but the one common thread
running through all of them is their *great* soundtracks!
Whether it be a self-hypnosis track, a Leonard Cohen song,
El Tigre, Elvis Presley, Bessie Banks, Minnie Riperton, Billy Brown or any of a
host of many others the choice is always engaging, and often fun.
Using her work to convey her ideas, concepts, feelings,
disdain and scorn seem important to SaveMe. If SaveMe has an opinion she'll find one way or another to express it regardless of what we might
think of that opinion or of her for expressing it. And if SaveMe’s intention is that her work
provokes a response, any response, then she has succeeded beyond most any other
artist I know of in Second Life. I certainly doubt that SaveMe is attempting to
make us gasp with her technical prowess or regale us with special effects; I suspect this is of little or no
interest to her.
Selecting one of SaveMe’s films to embed here was quite difficult.
There are many I could have chosen. In the end I opted for ‘Go To Hell’ released three years ago.
The reason is that is seems to be a personal story and conveys personal
emotion, something I enjoy in any film but which is particularly difficult to
do in machinima.
Check out SaveMe’s blog,
the ninety-odd films on her Vimeo channel
and visit the Retrospective for a better appreciation of
SaveMe’s work and her influence – both hot and cold – within the Second Life
art community.
Sunday, 7 October 2012
The Rejects of Gor
“In
denying our nature we betray no one but ourselves.”
It is always a crime when someone is judged simply by the
colour of their skin or the clothes they choose to wear. It is a crime also to differentiate
on the grounds of age, physical looks or disabilities.
But we all know this happens, often. Sometimes the discrimination
is subtle, quiet and underhand. Other times, like the subject to today’s blog post,
the discrimination is blatant and obvious!
Consider what occurred when three innocent and friendly grid-travellers
happened upon a Gor roleplay region.
Do you think these intrepid travellers would be welcomed
with open arms, comforted and fed? Or despised, spat upon and banned?
Watch the short film below and see if your “guess”…or dare we say, “your
bias based upon your stereotyped ideas about Gor”…are correct!
The
answer, dear reader, might surprise you!
However, regardless the outcome of this episode, as John Norman correctly says, we can only be true to our
own nature regardless of how others’ might
treat us.
I bring you now, this special presentation called ‘The Rejects of Gor’:
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
The Raven, the Horse and the Slug
“Better beans and bacon in peace, than cakes
and ale in fear”
In a unique, one-off concert earlier today, three actors performed
one of Aesop’s lesser known fables on the *C I C A* region (LEA13) – ‘The Raven, the Horse and the Slug’.
Although not generally known to the public, it was
reportedly one of Aesop’s personal favourites.
‘The Raven, the Horse and the Slug’ is a tale of
how a feathered and winged endothermic egg-laying vertebrate, a odd-toed
ungulate mammal and a terrestrial gastropod mollusk challenge each other to a
race to prove who is the fastest among them.
They decide the starting point for the race will be a nearby
glasshouse where, as Aesop told it, “no
stones have known to have been thrown”. The finish line was declared to be
the peak of yonder grassy knoll “beyond the
loving rain drops”.
The raven, horse and slug take the start line, guardedly checking
that the others do not cheat. The sound of the next child laughing would be
their starting signal…
And they're off!
The horse rides off towards the hill, quickly building up to a full gallop; the raven soars fast and high intending a parabolic rainbow arc
to the mound; the slug sluggishly slugs her way past the starting line…
The raven and horse speed ahead, looking back at the poor
slug as she sluggishly slugs herself an 1/8th of an inch forward.
Neck-and-neck the raven and horse race towards their goal.
At the foot of the hill, the horse’s hooves become bogged down by the wet mud
from the rain; the raven descends like a stone, closing her eyes to the rain…
The raven wins, followed seconds later by the horse. The
slug came in three and a half weeks later.
And the moral of the story is:
“Some times the end result is exactly as you would have expected”.
Credits:
‘The Raven’
performed by Cica Ghost
‘The Horse’
performed by Tutsy Navarathna
‘The Slug’
performed by Pixie Rain
Copyright expired circa 500BC.
Sunday, 30 September 2012
The Making of History: SL's Oldest Object
“We
cannot escape history.”
-
Abraham
Lincoln, 1862
The oldest object on the Second Life (SL) grid is ‘The Man’
created by Oldjohn Linden on Friday 19th July 2002, over ten years
ago.
One of the interesting things about this object is that it
actually pre-dates Oldjohn’s rez date by around six weeks! The reason for this,
according to the Second
Life wiki, is that it was originally built in the Alpha stage
of SL then known as ‘LindenWorld’.
It was built before any non-employee users had even logged into SL on a region
called Natoma, in a test-city informally named “Linden
Town ” or “Linden City ”.
It formed the centre piece of a town square behind a City Hall.
Although the city was deleted before SL opened to the public
in Beta, ‘The Man’ object was somehow overlooked and managed to survive!
A small number of coveted copies of ‘The Man’ exist in some
oldies Inventories. Philip Linden, for example, has a copy. Another copy is
owned by Erwin Solo who told me about its existence
and got me interested in ‘The Man’s’ history.
‘The Man’ has passed into Second Life lore and some
residents have been known to leave “offerings” to it. Indeed, some even say
that good fortune will come to those who stroke against it.
‘The
Man’ is still at Natoma region situated on a grassy knoll called ‘Philip’s
Hill’. Go visit and be part of history!
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