“Two wooden chairs in a field of yellow flowers under a wide, moody sky — landscape photo by Tegan Tenby.”

Spaces and Places — The Landscapes of Tegan Tenby

Tegan Tenby’s Spaces and Places at The Center for the Arts in SL invites you to pause, breathe, and wander through landscapes filled with stillness and clarity. Running through August, this upstairs gallery show captures the beauty of Second Life with nothing more than windlights, filters, and Tegan’s patient eye.

Black and white portrait of Lizzy Swordthain in Second Life, framed by delicate flowers."

🌥️ Cloud Galleries Artist Spotlight: Lizzy Swordthain

Step into the vibrant world of Lizzy Swordthain—DJ, gallery co-owner, and the creative force behind :: ʟ.ꜱ. ᴘʜᴏᴛᴏɢʀᴀᴘʜʏ :. Her Cloud Galleries exhibit blends warmth, connection, and striking imagery, inviting you to linger, explore, and see Second Life through her eyes.

Close-up of luminous eyes overlaid with vivid abstract patterns, creating a mystical mask effect that bridges shadow and light.

Engaging with Light and Shadow: Ritual in Second Life

Shadow bends, light sharpens. In Second Life, every ritual—whether draped in rope or wrapped in moonlight—follows the same arc: threshold, transformation, return. I have walked them both. Come through.

Rosie Riverstone’s Second Life photography series capturing solitary chairs outside red buildings, evoking themes of stillness and solitude.

Rosie Riverstone: Capturing Solitude in Simple Chairs

Visit Rosie Riverstone’s photos at Cloud Galleries—where raw, unedited photography captures the hidden beauty of Second Life. Her images of lonely chairs and fleeting moments invite reflection, connection, and a deeper kind of seeing.

Event poster for "Second Life Frame by Frame: Images by Inara Pey" at IMAGO Art Centre, showing a peaceful lake scene with a wooden rowboat and waterfall.

🖼 Frame by Frame – Inara Pey at IMAGO Art Gallery

Step quietly into “Frame by Frame,” a new exhibit by Inara Pey at IMAGO Art Gallery. Through misted paths and still waters, each image invites you inward—into presence, into story, into the magic of Second Life seen through a reverent lens.