• Step Into Monet’s Garden in the Middle off Stockholm

    Written by Natalia Muntean by Natalia Muntean

    After successful visits to cities such as Hamburg, Berlin, Vienna or New York, “Monet's Garden - The Immersive Experience” has come to Stockholm. An immersive experience created by screens, large projections, interactive installations, scents, and atmospheric music, the Monet's Garden exhibition shows the Impressionist pioneer's work in a completely new light. The show includes three experience rooms: the studio, the artist's mythical Normandy garden, and the exhibition room. Claude Monet's works are brought to life thanks to the imagination of Dr. Nepomuk Schessl, the producer and brains behind the immersive experience.
    Created by Swiss creative lab Immersive Art AG in collaboration with Alegria Konzert GmbH, the exhibition will be open in Stockholm until January 21st, moving to Malmö afterwards. We sat down with Dr. Nepomuk Schessl to find out more about the inspiration and mechanics behind the initiative.

    What inspired the creation of Monet's Garden – The Immersive Experience, and how was the concept developed?
    JNS: When producing a dance show in Kyiv in 2019/2020, we collaborated with video artists on the scenery. The dance show never premiered due to Covid, however the possibilities that the video artists showed us got stuck in our heads. And in the midst of the Covid depression, when we had to reschedule or cancel most of our concerts we were looking for a positive, productive project. When my father found a book he had bought in New York 30 years earlier with the title “Monet's Garden”, these elements came together inspiring the production of “Monet's Garden – The Immersive Experience”.

    How did you incorporate Claude Monet's revolutionary painting style into the technological aspects of the exhibit?
    JNS: We incorporate several ways of storytelling into the exhibition. Many of them are interactive, where we encourage our guests to engage and sometimes even dance with Monet's art. Each of those installations, though in an entertaining way, explains another aspect of Monet´s revolutionary style.

    Could you elaborate on how the exhibit balances being both ornamental and educational, catering to visitors with varying levels of art knowledge?
    JNS: If you want to convey any kind of knowledge or fascination, today the main challenge is to keep your guests engaged and undistracted for some time. Therefore, our idea is to take everyone by hand and let them experience Monet's art. Whether they are young or old, a Monet beginner or a Monet expert. The Monet expert will experience their favourite artist in a new way and might be able to comprehend Monet in a new way, while the Monet beginner does not have to bring any prior knowledge, while interest will be helpful.

    In what ways did Monet's Garden serve as the catalyst for the entire project, guiding the production process?
    JNS: For Monet himself, his garden, but before the garden nature in general, sort of was his artistic gravitational point. From the center of this point you can see his artistic and individual exploration of his surroundings. The garden therefore is a natural point of departure for exploring his art as well.

    What do you see as the potential and challenges of using technology to bring classical art to life, and how do you maintain the artistic integrity of Monet's works?
    JNS: Whenever presenting any artist's work in a new way, be that a musician, composer or a painter, there will always be a question regarding the artist's integrity. However the question is what would the artist have done for himself or herself given the same means? In Monet's case this is easy to answer. If you look at his water lily paintings, he himself already wrote that he painted them in such a large format and without the perspective of a horizon so that the spectator would fully immerse themselves in the painting. Therefore, making his art immersive in the modern sense seems to be very close to what Monet himself wanted to achieve with his art.

    How is the narrative approach incorporated throughout the show, and how does it enhance the visitor's journey?
    JNS: In understanding an artist's art it is always important to understand the context of it. Be that the historical context or even the very private personal context of the artist himself. Being able to see a painting while understanding the context is what makes this experience almost intimate.

    Considering the success in other locations, how do you anticipate the Swedish audience's response?
    JNS: We surely hope that the Swedish audience will also learn more and get to love Monet as many others did before.

    Are there plans to take Monet's Garden to other locations after Sweden, and do you have any future projects or ideas in the realm of immersive art experiences that you're excited about?
    JNS: As a producer and promoter there is always the next project around the corner. This is one of the great privileges of our profession, but nothing to be released just yet.

  • THE ESSENTIALS FOR A HYDRATING SEPTEMBER

    Written by Yasmine M

    Beauty Monday, means new inspiring products. Here are the heroes of September a set of restarting product for our hair, body and mind. 

    Maria Nila, Coils & Curls Co-Wash
    This Co-Wash is my September savior. With one use, your hair detangles smoothly while in the shower, while gently cleansing and moisturize the hair. The conditioning wash has lowered its pH and gentle ingredients for anyone with curly hair – waves, curls or coils so there is no need to finish with conditioner. Use it as a shampoo and thoroughly massage the entire scalp in circular motions to get the scalp and hair clean while adding water. Use fingertips in combination with Co-Wash to dissolve dirt and product build-up. For extra moisture, follow up with the Finishing Treatment. Find it here.

    R.E.M beauty eyeshadow palette 
    This spaceship looking palette, is not only really minimalistic and cute. But has a great mix of colors for you to create your own vivid illusions with this mix of six mattes and shimmers that you can wear from daylight to midnight. It’s inspired by Ariana Grandes own signature eye looks. And gives a creamy, smooth application that delivers optimal wear. Our beauty editor Elva also describes it as a perfect palette with cold matte shades with shimmery options. Find it at Sephora.

    ZO SKIN HEALTH Exfoliating Polish A good exfoliation is key. However, there are more exfoliators that sugar scrubs and scrubbing your face with harsh products. The ZO Skin Health is instead using magnesium crystals to provide exfoliation benefits that don’t harsh your skin. With the magnesium crystals it’s used to smoother the texture and give a cellular renewal. With Vitamin C, A, and E to deliver antioxidant protection for glowing skin. After cleansing, wet your face with lukewarm water and use a small amount of the product onto your fingertips. Gently massage the polish into your skin, using circular motions to help loosen and remove any dead skin cells and rinse. Find it here.

    NOBE Nordic Beauty Cooling Care De-Puffing Eye Patches
    The new nordic brand NOBE, have created a hydrating eye patch to use whenever you feel a bit dry, puffy or just want to calm down. We love that it’s 30 pairs, so you can really use the product any other day without feeling that you are running out. The Eye patches are soaked with product, almost dripping as you take them out of the package. As a part of the COOLING CARE line's the eye patches includes a refreshing FAZER XYLITOL® moisturizes and strengthens the skin's protective barrier. Not to mention, Soothing Cooler® which is a blend of extracts from aloe vera, kelp, yam, elm root and violet. All good things for September, when the weather is starting to get a bit cooler for us in Scandinavia. Leave on for 10-15 minutes. Gently massage the remaining serum into the skin. Find it here.

    MILK Makeup, KUSH Waterproof Mascara
    A vegan waterproof mascara for volume lashes from root to tip, great if it just starts raining this September and you don't want to look like a panda. The mascara is infused with conditioning hemp seed oil for softer, healthier-looking lashes. And as always with MILK the product is vegan, clean, cruelty-free and paraben-free. Buy the full size, or why not start with the mini-mascara - to see for yourself. A tip is to layer to your desired intensity. The conditioning formula help to to dry or stiff, so you can easily add more throughout the day. Find it at here.


    BIOpH Footcare Bath Give some love to your feeth by a footbath with a medical technology foot bath that exfoliates & deep cleanses. Mix the granules with water and you have a medicinal foot bath for you with your dry feet. Also suitable for those who want to maintain good foot health over time. Highly significant results i clinical studies already after one week of treatment. Combine it with the brands Inflatable foot bath and your are all set for fall. Find it here.

    Odalisque Magazine Issue

  • Linnéa Ruiz Mutikainen

    Live Performance, Narratives, and Self-Reflection: Queens of the Stone Age

    Written by Linnéa Ruiz Mutikainen by Ulrika Lindqvist

    When one attends an audio-visual performance, a concert for instance, the premise seems universally simple and applicable to each member of the audience. Performers perform, receivers receive. But while the reason for physical attendance may appear abstract, the performance could also trigger passageways to deeper reflection, based on authentic discourse between artist and audience.

    The artist is the central narrator whose narrative generally reflects themselves. There is a continuous intrinsic presence of first-person experience; recurrent incentives sparked creative revolt, later resulting in lyricism and melodic composition. As the creation reaches its audience, the incentives have been compressed into a stylized thematic retrospective. Oftentimes, the foundation of this discourse is a deconstruction of the self, merging past with present time, while posing the question of futurity. Audience can partake in the congruence between context and emotion, building a perplexing platform of possible self-reflection.

    In June 2023, American alternative rock band Queens of the Stone Age (hereinafter referred to as “Queens”) performed at Roskilde, a Danish festival with closer to 130,000 spectators each year. Roskilde thinks in parallel spheres, merging music with activism and conceptual arts, a possible bridge between strict entertainment and contemplative awareness. Queens’ performance doubled as an audio-visual manifesto of living life without fear, following the 2023 release of album In Times New Roman… which narrates frontman Josh Homme’s long standing intersection of personal traumas, in plural – seemingly a de- and reconstruction of the self, as in his self. As Queens entered the stage, Peggy Lee’s poignant song Smile played in the background, neatly touching beauty in chaos: “Smile though your heart is aching / Smile even though it’s breaking / When there are clouds in the sky / You’ll get by”. Queens’ latest album is profoundly vulnerable, it radiates sincerity and excels in vulnerability. In live installment, an indescribable kind of rawness is generated, stoically pairing their signature darker sound with intimate storytelling. Queens succeed in authentic discourse, and to encourage the audience to challenge their own self.

    In 1938, French existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre released Nausea, a diary format novel sharply reflecting on consciousness. The writer Antoine Roquentin is the novel’s troubled protagonist, preoccupied with questioning the idea of existentialism and its alienated perception while horrified by his own existence. Here, Sartre’s own ideas are dissolved through impressionistic, fictional narration, rather than autobiographical word-by-word recollection. The reader is provided with a wider framework containing spaces to fill, perhaps with fragments from one’s own self, life, and its intersections. Juxtaposing literal and figurative concepts could perhaps be approached as entering a narrational gray zone, where the reader is encouraged to reflect further – and reach for the unreadable. In this sense, when partakers indulge in these fixed narratives, they consciously surrender to possible triggers of (induced) self-reflection.

    In a larger sense, we may simply be compelled by the unknown, the undefinable, and the indeterminate – what could have been, what it turned out to be, what it might turn into. Fascination of the beauty in chaos, the beauty in our chaos. In conversation with Derek Attridge in 1989, later published in Acts of Literature (1991), philosopher Jacques Derrida shed light on this gray zone, as he dwells on the connection between autobiographical narrative and its oftentimes raw, cataclysmic character. “As soon as things become a little sedimented, the fact of not giving anything up, not even the things one deprives oneself of, through an interminable “internal” polylogue (supposing that a polylogue can still be “internal”) is also not giving up the “culture” which carries these voices,” he said. “At which point the encyclopedic temptation becomes inseparable from the autobiographical.” In this sense, no matter the narrative, we have a habitual tendency and desire to embrace chaos, to then divide and dissolve it.

    When Queens audio-visualized mournful lyricism on stage, the audience was invited to embark on a transformational quest of their own. One was not forced to explore or even react to this discursive command; one was skillfully given the opportunity. It is a glimpse into a cathartic floodgate within reach, a pensive sphere stretching beyond the abstract premise of live performance.

    Linnéa Ruiz Mutikainen
    Linnéa Ruiz Mutikainen

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