Hello, and welcome to a new and unusual episode
of The Art Assignment, where I’m playing
a game called Occupy White Walls.
It’s developer, StikiPixels, tells me to
pronounce its acronym “Owouawwouaw” and
describes it as “a PC sandbox-building,
AI-driven MMO where people play with Art.”
Which means—if you’re uninitiated, as
you can already tell I am—that it’s a
game where you and lots of other people get
to build art galleries, fill them with art,
and open them up for others to visit.
I’ve landed in this public plaza area, where
you can walk around and see the kind of things
that are possible to do with the game, at
least eventually when you build up your gallery
and collection and get to higher levels.
But here you can see the types of surfaces
you can use to make your gallery, get acquainted
with the bots who roam the place--hello, contagion,
I think I’ll let you be--and see some of
the art that the AI system named DAISY will
help you buy once you’re at your home gallery.
You can click in to each of the artworks and
see that some of them, like this one, were
recently made and sourced from I’m not sure
where.
But there are also a good number of historical
works like this one by Cecelia Beaux from
1914, which it doesn’t tell you here but
is actually in the collection of the Met museum
in New York.
Beaux was an accomplished and well regarded
painter of society portraits, and this is
Ernesta, the artist’s favorite niece.
Which is information it would be nice to have
here.
But the game is still in development and will
be updated and eventually replaced with a
more finished version.
When we’re ready to get out of here and
work on our own gallery, we can go to this
nifty postal box type thing, which allows
us to teleport to our “home” gallery.
Mine’s called sugenterprises, and I got
a slight start on it earlier just to torture
you guys a little less with my fumbling around.
But here we are at my front desk, where you
can see the splatter paint that accompanies
anyone’s arrival in a new space and will
thankfully disappear.
My gallery is very much under construction,
and came with a frightful assortment of partially
painted walls, which I’m going to do something
about don’t worry.
I’ve acquired a few paintings which I’d
like to show you, including this showstopper
by Swedish artist Hilma af Klint, which is
a very large painting in real life, and is
shown to roughly to proportion like all the
art in the game.
The amazing thing about this painting is that
it was made in 1907, which predates by years
the works by other artists like Malevich,
Kandinsky, and Mondrian who are often credited
as inventing “pure” abstraction in painting.
Her distinctive style emerged from her interest
in spiritualism, and very few even saw or
knew of her work until it was resuscitated
by scholars in the 1980s.
And there was just a huge retrospective of
her work at the Guggenheim Museum in New York,
so remember that history can always be rewritten!
But moving on, I also collected this lovely
still life over here by the brilliant Dutch
painter, Jan van Huysum.
It’s actually from the collection of the
National Gallery of Art, and this entry provides
some nice information for us.
And we can go in for a closer look here and
explore all of its exquisite details, like
this perfect little birds nest with shiny
blue eggs, and a butterfly perched just so
over here.
And look at this fly!
Van Huysum was showing off his mad skills
here, with these hyper-real flowers, some
fresh and some even a little wilty.
But we’re just getting started here, and
the way to buy more art is to consult with
their AI discovery engine DAISY, who offers
you a random assortment of art choices from
her database.
You peruse and click on the ones you like,
and then she learns from your choices and
offers you more of that.
Like, I like this work by Edouard Manet, which
nicely illustrates the urban life newly possible
in 19th Century Paris, women out smoking cigarettes
and drinking plum brandy, staring absently
into the distance.
It’s not nearly as good as this strikingly
similar but more cynical painting by Edgar
Degas from right about the same time, of a
young woman slumped in front of a glass of
absinthe.
But let’s buy it anyway, because at 350…
owouawwouaw units?, it’s a steal.
You don’t actually have to spend any real
money, by the way, this is all earned in the
game.
Once you buy a painting, you can go to your
inventory, pull the painting into your lower
tab, and hang it on a wall wherever you’d
like.
And voila!
A magical spotlight appears on it, even though
we don’t even have a ceiling or lights.
I’m going to try to hang it at about standard
viewing height, which for a painting that’s
not enormous should be about 60 inches from
the floor to the center of the work.
Mine’s a little high, but eh, we’ve got
bigger problems.
It looks a little funny without a frame, so
let’s add one in, maybe this minimal brown
one below.
Nah, too slim and not at all period-appropriate,
so let’s look at our framing inventory.
Eeps.
It does leave a little something to be desired,
but let’s try this one on?
Not awesome, but it will do for now.
Now the first artwork that I bought and hung
tragically low is this mound of butter painting
over here by Antoine Vollon.
It’s an exquisite painting, which is really
quite abstract when you dive into the detail
view and appreciate all of the loose brushwork.
Who doesn’t love a giant mound of butter?
(Vegans, I guess.
But you can’t please ‘em all.)
Alright, now the cool thing about this game
is that you can be a curator and make up any
sort of arrangement you want.
I like to think about sightlines, and what
you’re likely to see first when you walk
into a room, like this nice big wall here.
Let’s visit Daisy and figure out something
to put in here.
Hmm, next.
Ugh, Renoir, whom I cannot abide.
Moving on.
Eh.
I wish I could type in some names or keywords
here, but hopefully that will be something
that improves as the game develops.
Oh, but here we have a masterpiece by Diego
Velasquez.
His striking portrait of his enslaved assistant,
Juan de Pareja, whom he gives a name and a
substantial amount of dignity and agency.
Inside of this painting at least.
SOLD.
Let’s find some other distinguished individuals
to join him.
No, not her.
Oh, but yes, definitely her.
This treasure of a painting by Johannes Vermeer.
It’s not The girl with a pearl earring,
but it is A girl with a pearl earring.
She’s “A Lady Writing”, and look at
the details of her fur coat here and the delicate
ribbons in her hair.
Oh, and even more pearls on the desk!
That soft look about her face and the glowing
eyes.
Definitely a keeper.
I’m thinking we should make a portrait gallery,
so let’s go ahead and snag this bright-eyed
lady, mostly because of her little squirrel
friend, oh and the bird she’s holding unnaturally.
Weird, but good.
And this looks intriguing-- it’s a trompe
l’oeil, which is French for “trick of
the eye,” by an Dutch or Flemish artist
whose name we don’t know.
And wow, this one is great.
It’s a painting of a crumpled etching on
paper, that has been red wax sealed to a wooden
panel.
All the different textures rendered in paint!
And it’s a portrait to boot.
We’ll take it.
Let’s add this drawing by Toulouse-Lautrec.
And let’s look for some art from outside
of Europe, which is certainly represented
sufficiently in this game.
I think Daisy has decided that I like portraits
of women with animals, since they’re showing
me this woman with a caged monkey.
This is where being able to search with keywords
could really help.
But ok, so we add a few more portraits to
our collection, now trying to avoid the overabundance
of people with animals they’re offering
me.
And now it’s time to hang our gallery, starting
with our Velasquez, and adding other works
as we go.
Please forgive me if I’m making you motion
sick with my herky jerky movements here, I’m
learning.
And I’m now painfully aware of our lack
of ceiling problem as our Toulouse-Lautrec
is half in and half out of the sunlight, which
is really bad for drawings and will cause
them to yellow and fade.
If we go back to our inventory and look through
building supplies I think we can find a ceiling,
which you do have to purchase by the way.
But it’s worth it, because we must protect
our artwork.
And so now we can install a ceiling, and continue
to move around our artworks until we have
something that feels somewhat balanced.
Now this would be an extremely useful tool
for real-life curators to use, if you could
load in whatever art you’re working with,
and build or load in the space where the show
is going to be.
Some museum curators still work with real
life scale models, and others do plan their
shows with 3D modeling software.
But wouldn’t it be cool if any museum or
collection could load their work into here
and play this way?
And then everybody else could experiment with
that art, too?
I can’t bear it anymore, we must move our
mound of butter to a better location….
There.
And then we can look out over the open ocean
and wonder why no one is coming to visit our
gallery.
But before we figure that out, let’s work
on our space a little more, adding to and
adjusting our portrait gallery, and then figuring
out how to expand up and out, building a second
level.
There are all sorts of different materials
in the inventory, and different styles and
surfaces.
You can also change your avatar, but I don’t
really want any of these.
And you can also change masks, which is what
sets apart a bot from an actual human person
playing the game.
But these are all terrifying and we’re going
to take a pass.
Let’s find some building materials we actually
like, like these Corbusier walls and windows,
made from poured concrete and no doubt named
after famed modern architect Le Corbusier,
who did some pretty magical things with concrete
in the buildings he designed.
And let’s pick up some handy demolition
tools as well.
Now let’s get rid of these awful orange
stucco walls and replace them with these sweet
new concrete walls, rotating them into place.
Ah this feels better already.
This is not just an art game, but an architecture
game as well.
And it is SUPER fun to be able to put together
a space like this with a few clicks here and
there.
No, welcome desk, you stay where you’re
supposed to be.
GAH I’m so bad at this.
And while I continue to renovate my gallery,
and add some stairs so we can get to my mezzanine
up there, I’m contemplating the mistakes
museums often make when they expand too quickly,
or plan massive renovations that they can’t
afford or that don’t actually improve the
experience with art one has there.
And just like that we have a new space upstairs,
where
I’m going to hang a grouping of works DAISY
helped me buy and what I’m thinking of as
optically interesting or challenging works,
including a couple of pointillist paintings
by Seurat… a few others, including that
little trompe l'oeil we bought earlier.
And because this is all delightfully pretend,
we don’t have to consider the challenge
of hanging art on concrete walls.
Okay, now I’m really ready to figure out
how to open this place.
Let’s sell our under construction sign.
That doesn’t work.
So I guess I’ll go on a framing spree, and
collect some more art while I’m at it.
Let’s have a collection of Henri Rousseau’s,
why don’t we, now that I’ve found this
“Artist” button where you can see more
by a creator.
You’ll likely recognize many of his jungle
scenes, but the important note about them
is that they’re made by an artist who never
actually left France, and was a humble customs
clerk who painted on the side until his retirement
when he took it on full time.
But there’s something extremely strange
and surreal about his paintings, a mix of
realism and eerie dreamscape, whether they’re
common sights of Paris and its outskirts,
or completely invented jungle scenes.
The artworks do seem to be getting more expensive
as I’m buying more, regardless of their
maker.
Anyhoo, let’s make our wall of Rousseaus
to really wow our visitors, if ever we figure
out how to get them here.
Now this is getting really fun, and I’m
not sure of many places in the world where
you could see a selection of works from the
late 19th and early 20th century presented
on an uber contemporary wall surface like
this.
It makes me excited to experiment with older
works in newer spaces, and newer works in
older looking spaces.
And if only framing were as easy in real life
as it is in this game.
And our Klint looks much better in it’s
new home and frame over here.
But I’ve had it with this loneliness, guys,
and I’ve got to figure out how to get some
friends here.
Let’s teleport out to see what others have
done, and let’s just get placed randomly.
Ah, ok wow, this place has a tremendous number
of balustrades, doesn’t it.
And AHA.
I am very helpfully being told that I can
copen other player’s galleries for them
while they’re out.
HOW DO I DO THAT?
Approach the front desk, click E and open
the gallery.
IS IT REALLY THAT SIMPLE?
It looks like it is.
Well this has been a very enlightening trip
out into the world, and now there are all
of these visitors coming!
Let’s take a quick look around here, being
careful to avoid these treacherous pillars
everywhere.
Well this is an interesting and unusual arrangement
of pictures, but ok.
Now that’s enough of that.
Let’s teleport home!
And we’re back, and let’s “USE” that
desk.
WE DID IT!
Louise is here already!
Let’s type a little welcoming message and
get this party started.
And when people come to the gallery, they
leave you a nice little box, which are full
of OWW units!
Very exciting.
The more you earn, the more art and building
materials you can buy.
It just warms my wooden heart to see people
here and enjoying the art, like Avelina here.
I’ll go and see if she needs help.
Eh, nevermind.
She’s fine.
I’ll just go back to the desk and collect
visitor fees.
Oh hey, Paola.
Hi!
I know they’re bots, but that doesn’t
mean they shouldn’t be treated equally.
But this is quite a bit like running an actual
gallery, y’all, which was my job for several
years myself.
You’re just kind of there, available when
people want to chat, and but also not overly
available, so you don’t scare off the introverts
out there who just want to be left alone.
But nobody ever left me boxes of money.
Thanks, Takashi!
For our grand finale, and now that I actually
have an audience and some income, let’s
expand!
I think what I’ll do is create a walkway
across the lovely ocean here.
And come to think of it, this view is really
reminding me of the Louvre Abu Dhabi, designed
by architect Jean Nouvel, which was built
off of an island and designed to look as if
its floating.
We don’t have that kind of budget, but we’ll
do what we can, and construct a little gallery
here at the end where we can house one amazing
artwork.
Let’s go with this stunner by Gustav Klimt,
a portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer, completed
in 1907.
The painting was stolen by the Nazis and displayed
in the Galerie Belvedere in Vienna for many
years, until it was returned to the Bloch-Bauer
family in 2006.
They then sold it for $135 million dollars,
and that buyer donated it to the Neue Galerie
in New York, where you can see it today.
Needless to say, this is a many storied artwork
that can now exist in this digital space as
well as it’s actual space, and can be enjoyed
by countless others who can build their ideal
viewing environment around it.
Claudia just loves it.
But that’s really the beauty of this game.
You can’t replicate the experience of being
in the same room as these real-life artworks,
but for the many of us who can’t get to
them, or at least can’t yet, this is a really
amazing substitute.
The database can and should get larger and
more international, but in the meantime there’s
plenty to play with.
My work here isn’t done, but I suspect this
could go on for some time.
So download the game and come over and visit
my gallery anytime you like.
And make your own gallery and let us all know
how to find it in the comments.
Monstrum is a new show from PBS Digital Studios
about monsters, myth and lore.
The show is written and hosted by Dr. Emily
Zarka, who has a Ph.D. in literature with
a focus on monsters.
Head to the link in the description to check
out the show and find out the origins of iconic
monsters, and what these creatures say about
us.
Thanks to all of our patrons for supporting
the art assignment, especially our grandmaster
of the arts Vincent Apa.
