Not so long ago I Aianna Oh (RL and SL author and gifted story teller in Second Life) invited me to join her in the IBM 6 Sandbox in order to admire a few very special creations she had seen. Although I rarely go to sandboxes for obvious reasons, I relied upon the good taste of Aianna and arrived a few seconds later at the spot. As anticipated, I was not disappointed of what I saw after rezzing: tasteful arranged villages and scenes from RL, miniaturised to fit into a few square feet (in some cases a few square inches). After Aianna Oh left, I stayed at the IBM 6 sandbox for a considerable time, constantly discovering new details in the miniature towns and other objects. Especially whilst admiring the city of Venice and it's floating balloons I involuntary had to think of Jonathan Swift's ''Gullivers Travels"....
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The childrens play ground and Bella's place are part of a downtown scene of a town called Lilliton. This town is very large with a church, graveyard, park with tents and trailers, town square with a town clock, main street with telephone poles and lines and streetlights, barber shop, grocery store, museum (with pics that other artists donated), city hall, apartment building, gas station/garage, various other shops and office buildings, miniature golf course, hills with cabins for rent, home construction site, a river with a lighthouse and sailboats, water tower with a windmill on top, and a railroad loading dock with wildflower field. Some pics of it (when it was not completely finished) are here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/patriciaanne/page4/
Building Lilliton was a very big effort and a hard time finding a place to work on it because of the high prim count.
Building Lilliton was a very big effort and a hard time finding a place to work on it because of the high prim count.
The next day when I returned to the IBM 6 Sandbox I was lucky to meet the creator of these remarkable miniatures: PatriciaAnne Daviau. She was immidiately prepared to answer a few questions which had come in my mind whilst admiring her work the other day. In addition she agreed to pose for a portrait and a few close up pictures in Waikiti beach. Thank you again Pat, you did a great job holding those miniatures whilst enduring the long winding posing session.
LL: Have you always wanted to build and create miniatures in SL or did you gradually come to do this?
I have always loved miniatures as a child and when I joined Second Life I thought making jewelry was the only way to create 'small things'. As it turned out I was not very good at jewelry designing. I then saw the train in AM Radio's wheatfield and the very cool cafe Tezcatlipoca Bisiani had built and decided to try modeling those. I built rural America around those pieces and had so much fun putting the town together that I kept building more. Always learning and stretching my abilities.
LL: Are good eyes and a steady hand essential for building these tiny objects? Viewing the minute details you have added in your creations is not easy with my standard mouse; I wondered how must this be whilst building?
Oh yes! Good eyes, a steady hand, and lots of patience are a must for creating these tiny builds. With tortured micro prims you have to use your eye to line up textures because the numbers just don't work. I use a standard mouse right now but would love to explore the new technologies that are available.
LL: Are you influenced by the work of other SL creators? (At some distinct views in your landscapes I thought to see a touch of AM Radio…)
I am influenced by both RL and SL artists. And thanks to AM Radio, Tezcatlipoca Bisiani, Spiral Walcher, and others I have learned so much about texturing and scale. When I see a beautiful sim or an awesome build it can inspire me to model it. I think it is so I have a permanent memory of it.
LL: Although your work is currently to admire in the IBM 6 sandbox only, did you ever participate in a more permanent SL exhibition? I mean, it would be a great loss if your work would not be kept!
I had the rural America town on display for a short time on the Brooklyn is Watching sim, and a few of my pieces live in personal residences, but I have not held a show nor are any of my miniatures on display on any sim. The problem with my builds is that to get the detail I want without using textures to create the illusion of shape, I have to use quite a few prims, and not a lot of places have the prims available to support my builds.
LL: Do you have any plans of building more in the future and if so can you reveal anything about the subjects?
I have a few towns like Tokyo downtown,the full rural America town, and the Drive-In Theater, and quite a few musical snowglobes with miniatures in them not on display in the IBM 6 sandbox. I am always looking in RL and SL for things to model or ideas to create new towns. If you have any let me know :)
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Close-up view of a section of the Rural USA landscape, isn't this beautiful?
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I strongly suggest readers of this Blog to have a 'Gulliver's eye' look at PatricaAnne's miniatures in the IBM 6 Sandbox and say hi when you happen to meet her.
In the repetitive few days I have visited her display stand, I have seen a constant change of exhibits, so come back from time to time!