Archive for the ‘art’ Category

Octopus & Cuttlefish Sketch by Jun Kuroda

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Sketch of an octopus with tentacles in a heart shape and a thought bubble that says \"(heart shape) Jacek\"

I commissioned this sketch from Jun Kuroda (SL name), aka rotemu on Plurk, starving artist extraordinaire. She also made a semi-nude of CodeBastard Redgrave and other cool commisioned sketches!

If you want to commission a sketch to call your own, check out her Livejournal page or IM her (Jun Kuroda) in-world. They’re awesome, not at all expensive, and you’ll be helping out a really cool artist! ^_^

“I think I may have found yer problem.”

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

It seems the good folks in the networking department aren’t the only ones having connection issues.

Disconnect

Mouth in Foot Logo

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Mouth in Foot (JPG, small)

I’ve created an image. I hope you find it amusing. If you so desire, you may download it in your choice of image format (listed at the bottom).

They are copyrighted, but permission to use the images (and any derivatives thereof) is granted to you under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license. The images are not trademarks, and you won’t be sued or legally threatened for displaying them on your blogs, web pages, in virtual worlds, or in other places. You can even make good-natured parodies of them with absolutely no fear of retribution.

Enjoy.

Codie Logo

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

My entry for Codebastard Redgrave’s logo design contest! Click for a bigger version!

Codie Logo

Two takes on it. I’m partial to the cutout version on top, myself.

P.S. The B may, or may not, stand for (or look like) Bootah.

Photography Is Photography

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Regarding whether images captured in SL should be considered “photographs”, Hamlet writes:

I’m not totally convinced. Photographs, after all, are created by exposed light hitting a film or data strip. That doesn’t happen in Second Life. And while I think it’s fair to say that an image which is captured “raw” from SL is very similar to a real world photograph (I discuss that here), it’s also possible to subjectively manipulate the world’s appearance in a way that’s totally different. (When an RL photographer needs more light, he can’t just move the sun where he wants it.)

What’s more, many SL images are drastically altered in programs like Photoshop. A lot of real world artists use photographs as their medium, staging them in fictional narrative scenes, say, or even painting on top the actual photo, and because of that very process, they’re not called photographers– they’re called artists.

I consider Hamlet’s view here to be somewhat narrow.

There is no significant difference in the amount of scene-manipulation in RL photographs versus SL photographs. RL photographers may not be able to move the sun on a whim, but they can and do carefully schedule the time of day of their shoots, and use bounce cards and/or studio lights to manipulate the lighting of the scene. You can bet that they’d move the sun if they could. (And I bet some SL photographers would die for the ability to have light bounce off cards in SL — both realities have their challenges.)

Nor is the amount of post-processing (Photoshopping) significantly different between RL and SL photographs. We’ve seen the Dove Evolution film that demonstrates how much manipulation goes on before, during, and after a RL photo shoot.

Both RL photographs and SL photographs run the gamut from casual snapshots (”This is us having a good time at Jack’s bachelor party”), to careful attempts at capturing reality (”Behold the natural beauty of a majestic waterfall”), to highly manipulated digital imagery (”I cloned in the crowd of a thousand cheering fans later”), to strange and beautiful photo-collage and mixed-media imagery (”I think you’ve been sniffing too much rubber cement, Marcel”), and so much more.

The compositional skills — framing, balance, depth, contrast, and so on — apply equally to RL and SL photography.

So we’re left with one distinction. RL photographs are created by photons bouncing off physical objects, passing through the lens and aperture of a physical camera, and stimulating photosensitive materials. SL photographs are created by careful mathematical projection of virtual objects, rendered as polygons onto a framebuffer in a computer. In both cases, the result is a 3D scene being projected onto a 2D image plane.

It’s just that one of the scenes exists inside the computer.

I’ll leave off with one last thought: Photography has long been about capturing the vision of the artist. That’s not always the same as an accurate representation of the physical world.

Dying World

Sunday, December 23rd, 2007

Snapshot_076

Tinkering with Windlight settings at 4AM. Check out the rest of the set, too!

Modem of the Demmed 2

Monday, November 5th, 2007

It’s a bit late for Halloween-type stuff, but the troubles I’ve been having with my connection (yes, again) are truly frightening! I made this image last night to work out my frustration:

Modem of the Demmed 2

Femme Noir

Friday, October 5th, 2007

Femme Noir

Presented in Lurid Tentacolor for your Enjoyment

Monday, August 20th, 2007

Tentacolor Preview

Funny how the tiniest little remarks can inspire the most interesting ideas. I was chatting with Chrysocolla Rau in SL yesterday, and the conversation turned to the topic of tentacles, as conversations with me are wont to do.

Chrysocolla (perhaps prompted by my last name, Antonelli) mused that the Italian word for ‘tentacle’ is probably quite wonderful. Despite my name, I am neither Italian nor fluent in the language, so I looked up the translation: tentacolo (pl. tentacoli).

One tiny mental connection later, the concept of “Tentacolor” was born! I worked feverishly lazily into the night to produce something to show this remarkable Tentacolor. The image above is one frame out of a psychodelic, hypnotic, tentacolored animation. When finished, I’ll put the movie up on YouTube or similar, for the enjoyment of all!

Pixels Ex

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

Pixels Ex