Tuesday, March 25, 2014

The Freedom Project Thank You Ceremony & Exhibition Launch - Full Ceremony Transcript


Sunday the 23rd of March, saw an end, as well as a new beginning to the Freedom Project which kicked of on the 1st of September 2013. A thank you ceremony was held for all the artists, film makers and writers who participated in the project as well as an official launch of Freedom project artworks at the UWA Virtual gallery.

Thank you announcements by Dianne Elton, Gentle Heron, FreeWee Ling, Taralyn Gravois and Jay Jay Jegathesan
This unique event, organized jointly by the University of Western Australia, along with members of the Virtual Ability Group, and the Centre for ME/CFS and Other Invisible Illnesses Group in Second called for artists and filmmakers from around the globe who self identified as having a disability or chronic illness, to create an artwork or a film/machinima or in fact a personal story on the theme of ‘Freedom’, showing how virtual worlds have in some way helped them or those around them. 
40 remarkable works were received from Japan, France, Italy, Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, the USA and Great Britain among others, along with poignant reminders of how virtual worlds have the ability to do far more than most people unfamiliar with virtual worlds, might imagine.

The SIM was packed to its set limit of 45 to ensure integrity
As follows is a transcript of how the ceremony unfolded:

JAYJAY:
Greetings everyone, and welcome to the University of Western Australia, or UWA as she is known. As is tradition at UWA, I would like to acknowledge that the University is situated on Nyoongar land and that the Nyoongar people remain the spiritual and cultural custodians of their land and continue to uphold their values, languages, beliefs and knowledge.

The Freedom Project which called on artists and film makers and writers from around the world to to show us how virtual worlds have helped numerous people from all walks of life to overcome the seemingly insurmountable challenges has truly been a remarkable event. This has been so because of all of you here today who have been so willing to share of your wonderful artistry and writing showing us all the 'Freedom' virtual worlds can bring. This event would not have come about if not for 3 amazing people, our co-organisers, Gentle Heron representing the executive team of Virtual Ability, Inc., as well as Dianne Elton for the Centre for ME/CFS and Other Invisible Illnesses and FreeWee Ling, UWA virtual arts curator.

All of us would agree though that the real stars are all of you... who have brought us 40 soulful and thought provoking works of art, machinima and stories, hailing from all across the globe, from Strasbourg, Toulouse, Dawsonville, Osaka, Greenbay, Blackpool,  Salem, Tampa Bay, Perth, Tasmania, Warwickshire, Houston, Kansan, North California, Berkeley, Milan, Northern Rivers, Dallas, Detroit, New Mexico, Tenessee, Berlin, Tampa Bay, Ohio, Den Bosch, North Georgia, the island of Kaua'i, in Hawaii and from parts unknown in Canada.

I'd like to ask Dianne Elton of the Centre for ME/CFS and Other Invisible Illnesses to say a few words:

DIANNE ELTON:

Thank you Jayjay. I would like to begin by introducing myself to those who may not know me.

I am part of the organising committee and I represent the Centre for ME/CFS and Other Invisible Illnesses in Second Life.  M.E. is the acronym for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and the acronym for CFS is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. 

M.E. is a little understood illness, (even for those who have it).  At the Centre in SL, we provide help and support for those with ME/CFS and other invisible illness.  Members can attend guided relaxation sessions 4 times a week to help manage pain and symptoms. There is a weekly research discussion group, a weekly support/chat group, and a book group, all where people can meet in real time from the comfort of their homes, and even from the comfort of their beds and receive help and support from other sufferers. Many of these people cannot leave the house or even their beds, in real life.  The Centre also houses a resource library and a Creative Works Gallery.  If you would like to visit the centre in SL, I can give you a Landmark later. 

However, enough about me and the Centre for ME/CFS and Other invisible Illnesses. The most important part of today’s event is of course this thank you ceremony for all the contributors to the Freedom Project. I support and add to Jayjay in welcoming you all here today.  I am really glad that you have managed to attend. I sincerely congratulate you all on this truly wonderful exhibition.
For some of you, the work of putting together an entry has been quite a physical and mental effort.  I hope any of you who had a crash after putting in an entry, have made a reasonable recovery from your efforts and I hope you thoroughly enjoyed the creative process. We thank you not only for your amazing creations, but also for your honest, open and very moving and very inspiring stories. Through your creative works and your personal stories, this exhibition raises the awareness and the consciousness of those in normal health, and invites them into the worlds of those who live with illness and disability day to day.

When one has an illness or disability, it’s not uncommon to feel that the wider community, and sometimes even friends and family – and (dare I say it), even doctors sometimes do not understand what we go through. This exhibition demonstrates in a really wonderful, creative and inspirational way, that although people with illness and disabilities may be limited in real life, they are not limited in spirit, joy, determination and creative expression.

Someone said to me recently, when I told them about this project, “Why would they sit at the computer all day? They should be out in real life enjoying it.” She had no understanding that sometimes, because of illness and / or disability, the way one can operate in real life may be severely curtailed. To quote the words of a good friend of mine (Jane Olsen), “the Freedom Project transcends its virtual location, in my opinion, because of the deep artistry and emotion of the submissions.” For those of us here today, Second Life is not a game nor fantasy, but an extension of real life. It’s a place where we can be creative and expressive and socialize.

Many of us are cut off from real life because of illness. However, SL should not be seen as separate or alien from Real Life, rather, it is an extension of it, providing an opportunity for those who are otherwise isolated, to participate in a wide range of events. It also allows us to connect with others, be they healthy or challenged physically or mentally in some way on. The creative process therefore transcends Second Life ….it is Real Life.

To conclude, it is wonderful to be part of this Freedom Project. It has been a privilege to meet so many of you and to provide help to some of you with the process of presenting your entries and writing your stories. Thank you to all who have participated, to those who helped manage the Project and to those who have sponsored and supported the event.

JAYJAY :
And now I would like to invite Gentle Heron of Virtual Ability Inc. to share her thoughts:

GENTLE HERON:

Thank you. I’m pleased to represent the Virtual Ability community here tonight.

Dianne talked about disability; I want to talk about art! We have artists from all over the physical world, and from many different disability communities within Second Life.

Art has been an important part of human culture since our Stone Age ancestors painted the walls of the caves in which they dwelt. We use art in many ways. Art can be used for decoration of person or surroundings, declaration, instruction, warning, social commentary, religious ritual, even recording historical events. Perhaps the most important use of art is to communicate our feelings.

Both the creator and viewer of a work of art are interpreting the subject of that item. In this exhibit, numerous artists express their feelings about how being part of a virtual world has offered them the freedom to express themselves, to enjoy life, and to live more as they want to live. I invite each attendee tonight to spend time with at least one piece of artwork here, one that speaks directly to you, that moves you emotionally. Ponder it. Let it sink into your heart and brain. Feel what the artist felt when creating the work. Invite a friend to view the artwork with you, then find a quiet place to sit and talk about it.

Several academic researchers are thinking about how the affordances of virtual worlds impact people with disabilities. They need only attend this art exhibit to learn a great deal about that subject.

Thank you, JayJay and the University of Western Australia for hosting this event, and thanks to all the people who helped make it successful.

JAYJAY:
Before I hand over to FreeWee to speak about where we go from here, and also to officially launch the  exhibit, I want to officially thank all our sponsors and supporters, through whose contributions see the support for this project exceed L$670,000. I want to acknowledge co-sponsors Eliza Wierwight, who also created the beautiful poster for this event, David Doyle & Simone Flavelle of DADAA's stARTSPEAK Project, Tom Papas & Screen My Shorts Inc. (Sydney), West Australian artist, Len Zuks,  Beverley Hill of UWA's Equity & Diversity Office, Craig MacKenzie and Deborah Bolton of UniPrint,  TheDove Rhode of Peace is A Choice Gallery, Taralyn Gravois, AviewTV and LaPiscean Liberty, Eleanor Medeir and The Sim Street Journal as well as Kit Guardian and Guardian 11:11 for their multifaceted commitment towards the event as well, also iMoogi TV (imoogi.tv) and Nu Vibez Magazine (nuvibezmag.com) led by Filipa Thespian and of course Professor Ted Snell, Chairman of Visual Arts for the Australia Council and Director of UWA's Cultural precinct, who pointed us to the theme for this event.

Thanks to all of the support, we decided, rather than selecting a few of the artworks for special recognition, every single one is worthy, and as such all of you will receive L$7,500! Over to you FreeWee!

FREEWEE LING:
Thank you JayJay. I would first like to thank my team members, Gentle Heron and Dianne Elton, for their active participation in every step of putting this show together. The Freedom Project would not have been nearly as successful without their great work.

I also thank the many artists who have been so generous with their work and their stories. I can honestly say that I am as proud of this show as any we have ever done. And you should be proud, too.

I was not sure what to expect when we started this project, but it was clear from early on that we had some very talented people who had something to say. It also became clear that the community at large was very interested in the idea. We have had several blog posts and the Freedom Project team has been invited to do a presentation at the Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education conference next month.

In addition to the many artists we have not seen in our previous shows at UWA, I was especially gratified to have submissions by several of our veteran artists, some of the top artists in SL, about whom I had been unaware of their disabilities. I think we have clearly demonstrated that SL is an empowering and inspiring creative environment.

Your work and your stories will be published in a new edition of UWA Studies in Virtual Arts (UWA SiVA), an official university online journal. You can see previous editions at: http://uwainsl.blogspot.com/p/uwa-siva.html

And for the first time ever, we are delighted to announce that every participant in the Freedom Project will receive a nicely printed copy the journal upon publication. I am currently assembling image files and editing the text, and I hope to be able to deliver the volume to the printers within a few weeks. Please be sure we have a mailing address for you. We'll be contacting you about that soon.

Machinimist Taralyn Gravois will also be making a video documentary about the show. Right now I'd like to turn the proceedings over to Tara for a moment.

TARALYN GRAVOIS:
Hello, I'm Taralyn Gravois. This exhibit is beautiful..and very thought provoking. I would like to make a video that will get some of your thoughts about your artworks. For those of you that feel comfortable talking in audio I will be here next Sunday 4pm-7pm. I will just need each person for 5-7 minutes to ask them about their artworks. I can also translate for you if you want to answer in text.  So please send me an IM if you are interested.

FREEWEE LING: 
Related to the journal, I may be asking for your help. Specifically, I will be editing the text you provided to us for your entries. This is the text in the notecards that are given at each entry when someone clicks on your name.

I will be formatting the text for the book, correcting spelling and some punctuation, and possibly correcting grammar. But I will try to remain as faithful as possible to your statements. If you want to review your stories before I start working on them, please let me know ASAP so I can wait for your revisions. I will try to let you review my edits before publishing, but you will need to approve any changes I make quickly.

Please let me know any concerns or questions you may have about this. I'm always happy to talk to artists to make sure you are happy with the process as well as the result.


A dedication was made to the Freedom Project by Aquaglo in the form of a lovely machinima titled 'I Walk Alone'.


March LEA 6 Full Sim Gallery: Cinema II by Mary Wickentower

On March 5th, Cinema Take II opened with a grand particle show by Mary Wickentower. It is the updated version of Cinema! which made its appearance in September 2012. Details are here.

Cinema! Take II is an installation in celebration of Machinima brought to you by Mary Wickentower, with the help of her Girl Friday and most fabulous assistant, Danya Sadofsky.

Sponsored by the Linden Endowment for the Arts and AViewTV, this full SIM extravaganza will be open for the month of March on LEA 6.

Cinema! Take II features:
-->The magnificent Empire Movie Palace showing SL machinima in lush surroundings, with adjacent galleries featuring artisans from across Second Life, and a special viewing from "Photohunt" sponsored by  The Virtual Artist Alliance.
-->An old fashioned drive-in theater showing SL machinima in an outdoor setting that is a dying culture in RL..
-->Danya's Garden by danya.sadofsky, a place of peace & quiet. Outside is a lovely garden with a cherry tree.
-->The Swing Jim Dinner & Dance Hall - good foods & sock hops!
-->The Gallery of Art - Fine SL sculpture.
-->Dr. Petrol Gas Station - Gas up & get your green stamps & view a classic collection of pin-up posters.
-->Particle shows, sock hops, and performances to be announced.


http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/LEA6/124/247/23

Movie Palace donated by  Khan Omizu
Swing Jim Dinner  donated by n0th1ng Ackland
Drive-in screen donated by Ethos Erlanger

Cinema II is grander than Cinema! When you get here, you hear the sounds of sprinklers. Head to the sound and you are now on a wide, green lawn in front of a magnificent Hollywood mansion, straight out of a movie.

Cinema Take II near arrival point


The Empire Movie palace looks bigger and more sophisticated. There are cars packed by the curb.



Inside was bigger and more stylish than ever. I remember the old Empire was smaller and more simple.The front facade does look the same though.

Mary added mesh to this wonderful build. Also, there were Exit doors so you could go out from there and be in a lovely garden created by Danya.

The gas station looks cleaner and less grungy.

I asked Mary some questions and below is what she said,

What made you decide to do a sequel build?

--The first Cinema was pretty well received and there was some nostalgia expressed to see it again. The machinima community has grown and is very active, there have been some excellent movies produced since the original Cinema!  build.  Cinema! Take II also has a few new twists.  The new Swing Jim Dinner was donated by n0th1ng Ackland.  My assistant / gal friday danya sadofsky, helped expand the diner into a diner/dance hall where we have hosted some pretty swinging Sock Hops, with vintage music provided by DJ imre bellic.  A fine arts gallery has been added, featuring a variety of sculpture from all over Second Life. The theater galleries feature photographic collections from myself,  Melusina Parkin, students of the Visionaire Institute of Photograph and the members of the Photohunt, sponsored  by the Virtual Artist Alliance . The old time gas station interior had a whole new look.  Betty Boop has been rumored to be among the visitors to be seen touring the grounds and there may be a special issue of a free Betty Boop shape before the sim closes at the stroke of midnight, March 31.

Did you add mesh?

 Yes.   While mesh has some limitations, I do not shy away from mesh.  Mesh has added a whole new dimension to SL and is here to stay.

Is it me or does the gas station look cleaner and less grubby?
-- It's the same gas station as before, however there are interesting new details. The mini mart coolers have been replaced with shelves stocked with products you might normally find in a gas station - cans of motor oil, anti-freeze, gadgets as well as tools and tool bench in the car repair area.  The gas station also sports a nice variety of vintage pin-up posters from both my own collections and danya sadofsky's collection.  The gas station has also added green stamps, a real classic vintage detail.   Zoltar has been replaced with a coke machine.

That mansion, why did you add it? It reminds me of depictions of the fictional Jay Gatsby's mansion.

--The "mansion" is an art gallery dedicated to some of SL's finer sculptures from your timeless classics to you more avant-garde . Most of the pieces come from my own private collection of sculpture purchased through out SL.  A few of the pieces were donated, such as the clever rendition of the Flying Spaghetti Monster , donated by Daaneth Kivioq and created by Kae Fox. The Ice Age piece was a donation from danya sadofsky, created by Rezago Kokorin. Stop in, help yourself to a cuppa from the vintage "Tropical Birds" tea set, ease back and relax in the pristine white sofa and enjoy the fine arts from Second Life.

What's the main difference about the drive-in movie theater? Are there more or less cars in the lot?

--The drive in movie sports an new screen provided by AViewTV, with many wonderful new films and a great many more machinima artist's represented. And yes, the drive-in car lot has really filled up.  In addition to the cars that were donated for the original CinemaI made a special purchase to add to my growing collections of cars from around Second Life.

Why add in the garden? One wonders how it fits in. It seems out of place.

-- Danya's garden, provided by my assistant danya sadofsky  was an idea brought forward from my Wonderful World of Particles full sim art grant.   As you noted, the garden's style is quite different from the minimalistic style of 1940's California  features on this build , however is quite in keeping with the mountain streams you might encounter if you ventured outside of the manicured  city landscape and trekked into the surrounding foothills and mountains.   I nearly perished as a child in one of those real life wild mountain streams. I am here today to bring you this build, solely as the result of a single little rock that caught my foot and keep me from plunging over a mountain stream waterfall to my death.


upcoming events:

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Photohunt  by the Virtual Artist Alliance
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Wednesday - March 26  6PM slt
Photohunt will host a photohunt for their membership on Cinema! Take II
Resulting photos  will be on display at one of the Empire Theatre galleries.

PhotoHunt is a contest in which participants must shoot their best Second Life snapshot that embodies a theme or landmark provided by a moderator. Photos must be shot within a  sixty minute time frame.  No outside manipulations are allowed.

============
Visionaire Institute of Photography:
============
Thursday- March 27th - 3pm slt
Students will have a field day to photograph Cinema! Take II as a class assignment. Resulting works will be displayed in a Empire Theatre gallery.

Photohunt is hosted by Bear Silvershade.

Thanks to Mary Wickentower, Girl Friday, AviewTV, those who provided the builds and cars, Danya Sadofsky, and others who make LEA possible!

 Come here to go to the Cinema! and prepare to be entertained: http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/LEA6/124/247/23

Have fun and enjoy the art!

Victoria Lenoirre


Saturday, March 22, 2014

Freedom Project Thank You Ceremony & Exhibition Launch - 23rd March


THE FREEDOM PROJECT THANK YOU CEREMONY AND EXHIBITION LAUNCH 

LOCATION: http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/UWA/40/107/248
DATE: 23rd March, Sunday
Time: 5PM SLT

The Freedom Project which had been receiving creations for the past many months, will see a THANK YOU Ceremony and Exhibition Launch at 5PM SLT Sunday, the 23rd of March. 

The Freedom Project is a 2D/3D Art & Film Event organized jointly by the University of Western Australia, along with members of the Virtual Ability Group, and the Centre for ME/CFS and Other Invisible Illnesses Group in Second created an artwork or a film/machinima or in fact a personal story on the theme of ‘Freedom’, showing how virtual worlds have in some way helped them or those around them. 

This event is to thank all the artists, filmmakers, and writers for contributing their works and of themselves, as well as to thank the many individuals, groups and organisations who made this possible, including Eliza Wierwight, who created the poster for this event,  David Doyle & Simone Flavelle of DADAA's stARTSPEAK Project, Tom Papas & Screen My Shorts Inc. (Sydney), West Australian artist, Len Zuks,  Beverley Hill of UWA's Equity & Diversity Office, Craig MacKenzie and Deborah Bolton of UniPrint,  TheDove Rhode of Peace is A Choice Gallery, Taralyn Gravois, AviewTV and LaPiscean Liberty, Eleanor Medeir and The Sim Street Journal as well as Kit Guardian and Guardian 11:11 for their multifaceted commitment towards the event as well, also iMoogi TV (imoogi.tv) and Nu Vibez Magazine (nuvibezmag.com) led by Filipa Thespian

Feel free to come visit and take in all the wonderful creations anytime at the UWA Virtual Gallery.

FREEDOM PROJECT CREATIONS (Name, Artist Location, Artwork, SLURL for artwork)
Alysabelle Resident  (Eastern USA) -    My story (text)      

Ama Avro (Strasbourg, France) -  Passage           

Bamboo Barnes (Osaka, Japan) -  Cold lights 

Bamboo Barnes (Osaka, Japan) - Show me the place    

Barbie Alchemi/Fran Seranade/Draxtor Despres  (USA) -  We Can Learn & Grow & Heal Together  (Machinima/Film)

Barry Richez (Toulouse, France) - Freedom of Creativity  

iSkye Silverweb (Green Bay, Wisconsin,  USA) - Speechless Freedom   

Jesse Keyes  (Dawsonville, Georgia, USA) -   The Time Machine 

Johnny Lane (Salem, Missouri, USA)  -   Eat Soon       

Johnny Lane   (Salem, Missouri, USA)  - Japanese Macaque  

Johnny Lane (Salem, Missouri, USA)  - The Calm Dreamer     

Johnny Lane (Salem, Missouri, USA)  - Vincent's Mountains     

Krystali Rabeni (Blackpool, England) -  A Helping Hand 

Mathilde Vhargon (England) - Dancing With Impediments                   

Megadeus  (Tampa Bay Area, Florida, USA) - Mental Prison

Miranda [p3n3lop3] (Perth, AUstralia) -  Dance in Stasis            

Miso Susanowa  (Ohio, USA) - Big Winter 

Misprint Thursday (USA) - Goodnight Lights  

Pale Illusion  (Berlin, Germany) - GID (Gender identity disorder)          

ParkArt Collaborative (Multiple Locations) - ParkArt Gallery (Multimedia)   
    - DB Bailey (Tennessee, USA)
    - SolasNaGealai
    - Brenda Brody
     -Tray Rivera
    - Barbie Alchemi/Fran Seranade (USA)

Roc Furse (Den Bosch,  Netherlands)   - Escape        

Roiben Sweetwater  (North Georgia, USA) - Alice 

Roiben Sweetwater  (North Georgia, USA) - The Many Sides Of Me            

Roman Godde (Canada/North Carolina, USA) -  Beauty In Darkness           

Roman Godde  (Canada/North Carolina, USA) - Silent Night       

Ronin1 Shippe (New Mexico, USA) - Elephant With Flower

Ronin1 Shippe (New Mexico, USA) - Coyote

Ronin1 Shippe (New Mexico, USA) - Orange Planes

Ronin1 Shippe (New Mexico, USA) - Three Musicians

Roxie Marten (Detroit, Michigan, USA) - Gaze Upon The World 

Secret Rage (Dallas, Texas, USA) - I Choose Freedom

Sheba Blitz (Northern Rivers, NSW) - Circle of Freedom 

Slatan Dryke (Milan, Italy) - Yonder        

Starheart Erdhein (Kaua'i, Hawaii, USA) -  Mandala Dance (machinima)

Talia Sunsong  (Berkeley, California, USA) - Freedom Flight  

Tarquin Evermore (Kansas, USA) - Lotus of Enlightenment                

Traskin Snakeankle (Northern California, USA) - Lifeline   

Wally (Houston, Texas, USA)  -  Sky Populus       

Willo (Tasmania, Australia)  - Cyberwings               

Xia  Firethorn (Warwickshire, UK) - My Body is a Cage                      




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Monday, March 17, 2014

LEA FULL SIM ART SERIES (MARCH): Mary Wickentower's CINEMA! Take 2



The March 2014 round of the LEA FULL SIM ART SERIES sees Mary Wicketower bringing us 'CINEMA! Take 2'.  A full list of the Series 3 offerings for the LEA FULL SIM ART SERIES can be found on the blog: LEA FULL SIM ART SERIES (click here for full year schedule).

SPECIAL EVENT: Thursday, 20th March 8pm - 10pm SLT 
LOCATION: HERE ON LEA 6 


In Mary's words:


Cinema! Take II is an installation in celebration of Machinima brought to you by Mary Wickentower, with the help of her Girl Friday and most fabulous assistant, Danya Sadofsky.


Sponsored by the Linden Endowment for the Arts and AViewTV, this full SIM extravaganza will be open for the month of March on LEA 6. 


Cinema! Take II features:

-->The magnificent Empire Movie Palace showing SL machinima in lush surroundings, with adjacent galleries featuring artisans from across Second Life, and a special viewing from "Photohunt" sponsored by  The Virtual Artist Alliance.
-->An old fashioned drive-in theater showing SL machinima in an outdoor setting that is a dying culture in RL..
-->Danya's Garden by danya.sadofsky, a place of peace & quiet.
-->The Swing Jim Dinner & Dance Hall - good foods & sock hops!
-->The Gallery of Art - Fine SL sculpture.
-->Dr. Petrol Gas Station - Gas up & get your green stamps & view a classic collection of pin-up posters.
-->Particle shows, sock hops, and performances to be announced.

http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/LEA6/124/247/23


===============================


Movie Palace donated by  Khan Omizu

Swing Jim Dinner  donated by n0th1ng Ackland
Drive-in screen donated by Ethos Erlanger
Movie screens courtesy of AView TV
===============================
The  next scheduled event @ Cinema! Take II is a Hip Hopin' Sock Hop on   Thursday March 20th - 8pm to 10 pm slt

Our guest DJ is the howling platter spinner himself -  Imre Bellic (see his inworld schedule below)


===============================


Mary Wickentower

Monday, February 24, 2014

LEA 6 February 2014 Sea Mizin's California Redwood Forest Review by Victoria Lenoirre



Hi everyone and welcome to a new full sim exhibit here at LEA 6.

Sea Mizin has taken over with California Redwood Forest. The sim opened on February 16th at 1pm SLT.

It is such a magnificent forest. The trees look huge. There is a brook as well as rocks and some wood fences. I was so astounded by the size of the trees and the textures on the trunks. There were even fallen tree trunks. It feels like a forest wonderland.

Walk along the water's edge and you'll see lizards scattered throughout. You will also notice the rocky terrain. That element really added more realism to the sim. I felt like I was there. I could feel the roughness and almost feel the coolness of the rock.

In Sea's words:

Introduction
If you want to know what's growing in the mountains near Linden Labs? See for yourself. Walk among the California Redwoods. They live and grow to a mystifying age ranging on the upside of 2000 – 3500 years. Respectively known as Coastal Redwoods and Giant Redwoods. Researchers studying these forests remind us how little we know. Such as how many hundreds of years it takes for a mature forest to provide bedding for their sprouts and seedlings. Canopy science reveals an affinity to unexpected creatures. Be sure to visit, relax and enjoy the sights, especially our visiting critters; and, of course, don't forget...watch our very own baby redwood grow to full height! Take photos, use the stage. Once you've seen these forests, go 
see a real Redwood Forest, Enjoy!


Sea Mizin's California Redwood Forest

Be the Music and Performance Event!
Walk up to the highest peak through the Clothespin tree where our SelfServing Stage for performers is located – It's a delight. Just hop onto the stage floor, not the edge, and you'll be prompted for your stream. You'll know by seeing the yellow prompt for your stream information. The stage is automated - ready to use - without fuss. When you leave the stage, it reverts back to the SIM's music in 30 seconds. Use the stage when it's available. Planned events are the only exception. It's available throughout the remainder of February. Ask your friends to join you, making this your time. Contact Derek Sienkiewicz for more information about the music venue.

Credits and Permissions

Vicki Firecaster, Watch her magical scripting grow a Redwood Tree 
  • Nintin, Critter creator and scriptor of salamanders and banana slugs
  • Arrehn Oberlander, Dance Machine, and his latest, The SelfServing Stage
  • rockmccool, Critter scriptor
  • Harter Fall, Misty clouds
  • Derek Sienkiewicz, Music, DJ, and for space to work, a whole year...Bravo Derek!
  • Kay Garaguru, Hours of lessons in patience and sample builds
  • Johnas Merlin, Awesome help on build approaches
  • Kurk Mumfuzz, Many many reference photos of Muir Woods, 2013
  • Mel, Extra photos of Henry Cowell Redwood Park and a place to sleep, 2012/13
  • Carlos & Lauren, All their photos of Mariposa Grove, Yosemite 2013
  • Motoko Oanomochi, Redwood Tree entrance at LEA5 using 3D&Dreams
As always, I asked the talented artist of the LEA full sim some questions, which she happily answered and expounded upon. Thank you, Sea! :-)


Hi Victoria, Thank you for the opportunity to talk about the California Redwoods LEA6 full SIM installation. I'm happy to answer. This is the first time I've been asked, so I'm a bit unsure if I wrote too much or off point. To preface your questions I'd like to add the following. Life, and everything we don't call life is related, having equal influences on each other and on ideas I'm entertaining. As an artist, when I focus on a topic, I like looking at all these relationships as though they are a singular being thriving on the planet. Education teaches us to compartmentalize in order to focus on a particular topic. It's a good way to learn. 

As an artist I try to refit the world together as a whole organism.  For example, respiration is a process consisting of plants consuming carbon dioxide and producing oxygen; we animals thrive by consuming oxygen and producing carbon dioxide, which the plants live off of. I've simplified the process and left out a few anaerobic players. There is a synergy and symbiosis in us and in the nature we are part of. We are not outside of nature! We live in an species-rich environment, alien rich even, if you see our planet as an extraordinary biosphere. Life is the one experiment that we cannot repeat or test. It is original from the Big-Bang birth of this universe we live in.

Contemplating this always begins a process leapfrogging from the last thought or build in my case. Symbiont Host was such a build. I'm only getting started exploring building from what I've read and thought about. I enjoy researching. I revisit a place when I can, read journals, books, research papers, and use my local library extensively to obtain copies of scientific articles. This activity takes a lot of time, yet it is how I enjoy experiencing learning, letting my mind wander through all the information. It provides a happy, peaceful contentment I find irresistible.


me: Have you been to the Redwood forests in California? Any fond memories?

Oh Yes! I have been to several Redwood forests in California. The first redwood forest I visited was when I lived in San Francisco, and on the spur of the moment decided to go up to Humboldt and stay the weekend there. I had to beg the park ranger to let me camp nearer the redwood forest saying I promised not to walk on the trees' shallow root systems. Years later, I lived along the San Lorenzo river just outside of Big Basin Redwood State Park. We had many coastal redwoods, the Sequoia sempervirens, on our property. They propagate from roots or a stump, not so much by seed. These trees are formidable survivors and it's why Vickie Firecaster's script to grow a baby into an old growth redwood is an important feature of this show. You can see it growing near the landmark.  In real life I've seen baby saplings shoot up to 20 feet in less than two summers. 

Another fond memory is a bike ride I took up Waddell Creek road from Highway1 at the beach to Big Basin and Skyline. Along the way, there were two old camp pools that had what I always thought were California Giant Salamanders swimming. Campground barriers prevented getting close enough to identify these large salamanders other than size, spot shapes, and their vibrant two-toned redwood colors. They were so jam-packed in the pools scrambling over each other, I couldn't stop watching them. It was a hot Santa Cruz day with hundreds of them frolicking in the water. In this show, I created a natural swimming hole near the landing site where Nintin put a bunch of her California Giant Salamanders a-swimming after telling her this story.  She has created the most commonly seen salamanders and the ubiquitous banana slug. The swimming hole is alive with vibrant salamanders. 


me: Where are you from? 

I've traveled a lot as a child, always playing in nearby woods, rivers and ponds, I don't consider where I'm from too much because I didn't stay in one place too long. The only exception was my time living in the Santa Cruz Mountains of California amongst the Redwoods. That area will always be home to me, no matter where I am. 


me: What do you like about Redwood trees?

Everything, I like everything about these two trees, the Coastal and Giant Redwoods. I am fascinated by their rareness, the oddity of their age, sheer size and structure, bark, canopy, mosquito-free zones, genetic make up, along with what is yet undiscovered. They are an enigma with few comparisons in age. Bristlecone pines are another age-defying species. There is much on the internet that people can readily read. But until you've walked in a Redwood forest, there's no way to experience it. Its sheer quiet, its height and girth, its filtered light, the engulfing fog, and so much more is the experience I want to share with those who have never seen such a forest. LEA6 begins that experience.

Two of the most recent advances in understanding either redwood is canopy science and genetic research on paternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (pmtDNA). Canopy science shows us baby redwood trees grow straight up off massive lateral branches with circumferences greater than trees on the ground. Researchers are just beginning to identify species living and thriving up there, including the Marbled Murrelet who lays its eggs high in the canopy. Wandering Salamanders find water in the tons of soil located on canopy branches, such that they can live and thrive and be at the top of the food chain with virtually no predators. Plants usually located on the ground are blooming and propagating in the in the canopy. These include the Douglas Fir tree, Huckleberry's, and ferns. 

The biggest anomaly and surprise to me is the inheritance of pmtDNA in the Coastal Redwood, the Sequoia sempervirens.  Yet in the Giant Redwood, the Sequoiadendron, mitochondrial DNA is inherited maternally. This fascinates me! And it's a huge bit of knowledge but understanding its nature is yet to be revealed.  What caused this particular event?  By the way, petunias and tomatoes have inherited pmtDNA.  Now that's more interesting than ever, because most life is maternally inherited. And there are some one-celled organisms that don't even have mitochondria. Mitochondria are the power houses of each of our cells. Respiration, energy, and survival are inherent from this little organelle with its own DNA, usually handed down from the mother. What separated the two Redwoods' inheritance?


me: How long have you had this idea to build a forest in SL? 

Not that long really. I had returned from a winter visiting with friends in the redwoods of the Santa Cruz Mountains when Jayjay Zifanwe announced there was only one day left to apply for one of the available months of the LEA6 Full SIM Monthly Art Series. I felt a sense of wonder about my visit and was refreshed with all the tall beauty still in my mind. I had taken a lot of photos, drew a bit too, thinking, “Hey, this could be a fun build.”  I quickly wrote Jayjay, requesting a far-off month knowing I'd need a lot of prep time and there'd be plenty to do. I was excited about sharing an exhilarating experience with others who'd never seen or walked among such majestic scenery.  Of all the redwood groves in the area, I had never seen this one when I lived there, except as I drove by traveling toward Trader Joe's in Santa Cruz. I always planned to visit on the drive home, but by that time of day, I was too tired from shopping all day to stop.  But during the winter visit, my friends got me going for my walks in that park. It was then I reconnected with the beauty of the trees and the San Lorenzo river, and the people who walked and ran there. I needed to connect with them. Each tree had its own story as did each person. I was glad to be in the woods again. Its ancient nature created a constant sense of well-being. 

Vickie's growing tree, Nintin's 'manders and banana slug, and Arrehn's SelfServing Stage are normal sites at any coastal redwood forest in central California. Music thrives in these woods the way Derek's expressive Djing created just for these redwoods do. I couldn't have duplicated the fullness of this forest so quickly without their help, or those who took photos of their own walks and runs during the prep time and gave me rights to use their photos and who also provided input for this event. Support from each one listed in the Credits and Permissions was needed and appreciated. I could not have done without anyone of them. My thanks to all and to LEA and Jayjay for this opportunity and the pleasure of building such a pleasant site. 

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Her build is truly stunning and majestic. Come see it before it goes away!

Come see this colossal forest at LEA 6!

Thank you to everyone who makes LEA 6 and other art sims possible!

Have fun and enjoy the art!

- Vic