uwa siva 1.5: artists' choice: water

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University of Western Australia Studies in Virtual Arts (UWA SiVA) Vol.1, No. 5. Exhibition catalog from the September 2012 show at the University of Western Australia's virtual campus in Second Life. ISSN: 2200-7865 (Print) ISSN: 2200-7873 (Online)

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UWA Artists’ Choice ChallengesAn exhibition series of original digital art in a virtual world

WaterFreeWee Ling, curator

UWA Studies in Virtual Arts | September 2012 | Volume 1, Number 5

ISSN: 2200-7865 (Print) ISSN: 2200-7873 (Online)

UWA Studies in Virtual ArtsSeptember 2012Volume 1, Number 5

ISSN 2200-7865 (Print) ISSN: 2200-7873 (Online) http://uwainsl.blogspot.com/p/uwa-studies-in-virtual-arts.html

Jay Jay Jegathesan (SL pseudonym: JayJay Zifanwe), Project Director, Co-curatorD. A. Newton (SL pseudonym: FreeWee Ling), UWA Honorary Research Fellow, Lead Curator, and General Editor

Copyright © 2012 by D.A. Newton. All rights to the original works depicted are owned by their respective creators, and images thereof are used by their permission. All text and images by D.A. Newton/FreeWee Ling unless otherwise noted.

Contact:Jay Jay JegathesanSchool of PhysicsThe University of Western Australia (M013)35 Stirling HighwayCrawley WA 6009AustraliaEmail: jay.jay@uwa.edu.au

UWA Studies in Virtual Arts comprise exhibition catalogues, special editions, and monographs on the arts in virtual worlds. Focus is especially upon the 3D art competi-tions held at UWA’s virtual campus in Second Life.

CitationContributors retain intellectual property rights to their material and may re-publish it provided that UWA SiVA is acknowledged as the original place of publication. Material in UWA SiVA may be reproduced in whole or in part for non-profit use for the purposes of education research, library reference, or stored and/or distributed as a public service by any networked computer. Any commercial use of this journal in whole or in part by any means is strictly prohibited without written permission. Any use of this journal in whole or in part should include customary bibliographic citation.

“Second Life®”and “Linden Lab®” are trademarks of Linden Research, Inc. The univer-sity of Western Australia and UWA SiVA are not affiliated with or sponsored by Linden Research.

ContentsIntroduction

The Work

2012 is the third year of 3D virtual art challenges at the University of Western Australia’s virtual gallery in Second Life® (SL™). Through these competitions, UWA in SL is recognized worldwide as one of the most imporant ven-ues for the presentation of virtual arts.

This year we feature two separate and non-concurrent art challenges: the UWA 3D Artists’ Choice Challenges, and the UWA Centenary 3D Art Challenge. From January through March and August through December, we will feature monthly sponsored theme challenges, beginning with the January theme of “3D Self Portraits,” followed in February by “Perfume,” March “Music,” August with “Air,” and September with “Water” as shown in this issue of UWA SiVA. From April through July we held a single major open competition in celebration of the Centenary of UWA, with L$550,000 Lindens (about $2200 USD) in art prizes and L$775,000 ($3,400 USD) for “Machin-imUWA V,” a related animated film competition.

For the UWA Artists’ Choice challenges, a different theme is announced each month, but the core theme is personal expression. We want the artist to use this as an opportunity to explore some aspect of their personality, not only as a creative artist, but also as a critical observer.

An essential difference in these shows is the judging. When artists submit an entry they agree to serve also as a judge for the prize awards. Thus the awards are deter-mined by the recipients’ colleagues, making this a unique process of consensus among peers rather than a critical adjudication by an outside panel.

As with most UWA challenges, participation is open to anyone and no qualification is required. There are techni-cal limits to the number of parts contained in an object and to server load. There is no size limit except to the extent that it impedes our ability to show other work or impacts other activities of the university. We accomo-date video and audio media streaming, sound and light emitters, motion scripting, etc. Often we are confronted

with work that presents special difficulties in presenting it properly. But we do whatever we can within reason to work with artsts to support their visions.

For the fifth round of the UWA Artists’ Choice Chal-lenge we turn to the ethereal element called “water.”

The artists were given the following contextual statement:

This is the second of a sub-series of elemental themes, begun last month with “Air” and to continue next month with “Fire” and then “Earth.” The final theme for the Artists’s Choice Challenges will be “Triptych,” to be shown in December.

We want to acknowledge the generosity of our patrons and sponsors for this year’s projects:

• Jay Jay Jegathesan (JayJay Zifanwe), Prof. Ted Snell, and the University of Western Australia

• Flora Nordenskiold for Nordan om Jorden• Fiona Blaylock and artFiona• Armany Thursday and Dyce Underwood for DNA

Art and Music Fusion• Eliza Wierwight and Patron• Cherry Manga and Anley Piers for Mysterious Wave• Ginger Alsop and Phi Designs• Zachh Cale and projectZ

Introduction

Theme for September: “Water”

We are mostly water. The surface of our planet is mostly water. It nourishes, cleans, transports, entertains, and inspires us. Too little water and everything withers and dies. Too much water and we have hurricanes, tsunamis, floods. Its weight can crush or drown us, or float a half million ton ship. Wa-ter is sweat, tears, saliva... Think rain, boats, sweat, sailing, sharks, fountains, marine life...

The Work

There were 19 entries by 17 artists (including 1 collaboration):

Aquaglo and MellyDee Macfanatic ~ All Creatures Need Water; Conserve!

Barry Richez ~ Koi

Charles Hera ~ Maelstrom

Corcosman Voom ~ Big Fish

Dragon Lord ~ Erechteion of Poseidon

Dusty Canning ~ Row, Row, Row Your Boat

Emily Elegy ~ Fountain with Dolphins

PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD: Finn Lanzius ~ Evening Shore “A Living Painting”

FreeWee Ling ~ Square Waves

FreeWee Ling ~ Toroid Waves

FIRST PLACE: Hypatia Pickens ~ The Bathing Ladies of Voynich

JarooUK ~ Waterfall

Krystali Rabeni ~ Back To Nature

Krystali Rabeni ~ Reaching Out.

THIRD PLACE: Lilia Artis ~ Thirst

SECOND PLACE: Secret Rage ~ The Waters of Life

Secret Rage ~ 75% Troubled

Silene Christen ~ Last Hope

Violetta Carolina ~ Silent in the Mind

Because there were no non-scripted entries in the WATER show, no special award was given in the Non-Scripted category.

* As in previous challenges, curator FreeWee Ling elected to withdraw from prize consideration, but remains a participant in the exhibitions.

Aquaglo and MellyDee Macfanatic ~ All Creatures Need Water; Conserve!

Barry Richez ~ Koi

Charles Hera ~ Maelstrom

“Life beckons. Dangerous but seductive it challenges us to abandon our restraints and give ourselves to the moment.”

Corcosman Voom ~ Big Fish

“A sculpture inspired by a painting by Arshile Gorky.”

Dragon Lord ~ Erechteion of Poseidon

Dusty Canning ~ Row, Row, Row Your Boat

Emily Elegy ~ Fountain with Dolphins

“Building is my passion , i love to create new projects and look for new solves of problems connected with building. Now i try to create sculpts and still make textures:)). I am from Poland.”

Finn Lanzius ~ Evening Shore "A Living Painting"

FreeWee Ling ~ Square Waves

“‘Square Waves’ and ‘Toroid Waves’ are experiments in illusory motion. In Square Waves, the motion is achieved by the flexible prims affected by ambient winds. In Toroid Waves the motion is entirely the result of an animated texture on a specially constructed sculpted prim.”

FreeWee Ling ~ Toroid Waves

Hypatia Pickens ~ The Bathing Ladies of Voynich

“To say I based this on the undeciphered Voynich Manuscript is to say enough. Those who don't know it can find out about it by touching the manuscript book to the side, but the build should speak for itself and for the viewer who finds in it what he or she will. I like to think I've expressed something here about the moist and cyclical regeneration of life. Or perhaps the healing properties of water. Almost all the textures in this build have been reproduced by me either in colored pencil, paint, or Photoshop.

JarooUK ~ Waterfall

Krystali Rabeni ~ Back To Nature

“Both of these pieces show my passion for nature and art, both similar but different.”

Krystali Rabeni ~ Reaching Out

Lilia Artis ~ Thirst

“Earth is also sometimes called "The Blue Planet". Looking down from space the huge amount of water lets it appear in this colour - and yet, even in 2012 with all our modern technological abilities and global infrastructure there are still people dying of thirst and starving because the fields are dry ...”

Secret Rage ~ The Waters of Life

Secret Rage ~ 75% Troubled

Silene Christen ~ Last Hope

Violetta Carolina ~ Silent in the Mind

The sim was set with a central landing pad and separate “lily pad” islets for each entry. Various water craft were placed to provide transport, including inner tubes, fantasy boats, and submarines, but it was expected that most visitors would simply fly from one to the next.

The UWA sim was flooded to 100 meters for the duration of the exhibition. The normal water level is 20 meters, and the UWA campus buildings and trees sit on land just above that, rising another forty meters, leaving 40 meters of water depth available for the show. We installed a false sea bottom at 60 meters to hide the campus below, but there was a portal that allowed visitors to explore the submerged campus as a sort of Atlantean ruin.

Above the sunken campus a sea floor was constructed to serve as the base of a fabulous undersea park, with many aquatic features, including corals, fish, stingrays, shipwrecks, and ruins. A perfect space for mermaid parties.

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