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Periphery & Animals As Leaders @ Brooklyn Bowl 11.22.2017
2017 © Fred Morledge - www.PhotoFM.com
For licensing or prints of these images, please contact Fred@PhotoFM.com
If ever there was a band that deserved a better place to play for this night, it is Periphery. The stage was almost non-existent and the lighting was horrible. There were times when you could not even see the band since the lighting was so uneven. My pictures reflect this. However, Periphery did not disappoint. They are technical wizards on their respective instruments. And they have fun on stage!
Si jamás fuera una banda que mereciera un mejor sitio para tocar, sería Periphery. Casi no existía algo que se llamaría un escenario y la iluminación era horrible. Había ocasiones en las que ni siquiera se podía ver la banda debido a las luces tan inconsistentes e irregulares. Mis fotos reflejan esto. No obstante, Periphery no me desilusionó. Todos los integrantes son magos técnicos en sus instrumentos respectivos. ¡Y se divierten en el escenario!
Periphery performs on the Tilly's Stage during Day 3 of South By So What?! Music Festival at QuikTrip Park in Grand Prairie, Texas.
March 16th, 2014
Photo © Terry Dobbins 2014
**DO NOT USE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION**
The 2009 Pillow Fight at Dupont Circle in Washington, DC; the second of two such events that day (the other occurred earlier on the National Mall). We arrived at 15:00 on the dot -- the time for the start of the pillowfight. We staked out a spot along the periphery of the area and watched the mass of people mill about. It would be obvious to any frequent visitor to Dupont Circle that something was amiss... a lot of people and a lot of pillows plainly visible.
Several minutes late, the mêlée began and once again: everyone just kind of jumbled into one cluster. My friend Lindsey and I tried tried to lure some people out of the crowd -- with limited success. It would have been great if we could've gotten the pillowfight to be all about the circle rather than one compact mob.
I dove through the middle a couple times as photographers hounded the benches and fountain steps. Bystanders watched on curiously, this time with a bit of a better view than at the Mall. During the first round, photographers circled the pillowfight such that passersby would be unlikely to figure out what, exactly, was going on.
Now, bystanders in the grassy area generally had a clear view past the bushes toward the crowd. Additionally, people whom had occupied the benches prior to our arrival were afforded front row seats to the mayhem. The greater range of high positions for photographers also helped to thin their wall a bit.
After diving through the middle a few times, I pulled Lindsey to the other side of the fountain and we dueled a bit. Except with our bodies in the mid 20's, we just couldn't keep up with those young whippersnappers elsewhere... we wore ourselves out pretty quickly and retired to a quiet existence upon the fountain steps.
After the main pillowfight, pillowfight-oriented games continued around us as Peyton got up to photograph the action up close. These games afforded photographers far greater opportunties, as instead of a jumbled hodge-podge of people; now you could capture the action of individual chases and battles.
It was about an hour and a half later when the crowds started to really thin out, though there were some dedicate folk still duking it out even when we made our way back toward the cherry blossoms downtown.
Coyotes have long been residents at the periphery of our town, but have now penetrated into the residential core of "Old Oakville". A year ago a mating pair took up residence in a small woodlot 100 yards west of our house. Our back yard is surrounded by a chain link fence but we knew that it would not stop a coyote: our neighbours yard is not enclosed at the side so an unwanted visitor could just stroll into their back yard. For many months we have gone outside after dark to stand watch over our dog Cole (an occasional Flickr star!) when he goes out for a bathroom break. Sure enough, on Wednesday morning I put him out at 5 am and he began to bark when he went down from the porch. A coyote was indeed next door and came over the fence after Cole. They had a brief face-to-face confrontation and Cole broke for the porch with the coyote in pursuit. Fortunately, the coyote retreated when I yelled at it and it effortlessly cleared the fence back where he had come from. The whole incident took 10 seconds. Happily, Cole was unharmed, but spent 5 minutes storming around the yard barking & growling; I guess he was annoyed about the invasion of his territory!
I bumped into one of the coyotes (above) at the edge of the woodlot last week: looks like he has mange as is usually the case with them around here.
If you interested in urban coyotes (or often coywolf hybrids in eastern North America) there is a program at PBS Nature in the US:
www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/coywolf-meet-the-coywolf/8605/
or CBC's The Nature of Things in Canada:
Periphery
Summer Slaughter Tour
@ House Of Blues
Hollywood, CA
July 20, 2012
All Photos © Kaley Nelson - www.KaleyNelson.com
Periphery performs as part of the 2013 Summer Slaughter Tour at The Fillmore in Silver Spring, Maryland.
August 2nd, 2013
Photo © Terry Dobbins 2013
**DO NOT USE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION**
Periphery
Summer Slaughter Tour
@ House Of Blues
Hollywood, CA
July 20, 2012
All Photos © Kaley Nelson - www.KaleyNelson.com
RYDER HENRY
Periphery (2010)
cardboard, sawdust, fibers, acetate, plexiglass, mirrors, cassette motors, enamel, and oil paintings
Ryder Henry enjoys crafting miniature buildings and spaceships out of found cardboard, plastic, and assorted electrical components. He works on a scale of 1: 213.333. This number is derived from standard 80” doorways being shrunk to a height of 3/8”. The volumes thus become less than one 9 millionth of the real world.
The scale is the foundation for his miniature city, 4 Lydia, which has appeared in numerous exhibitions. Ryder depicts the world of 4 Lydia through paintings which begin as still-life (direct observation of the model) and move towards landscape with life activities portrayed.
Ryder interposes models of real houses (places he has lived and places where friends live) among his imaginary buildings. Aside from being a valuable exercise in craft, this gives him a more accurate sense of the scale in which he works. Pittsburgh has been his home now for a few years.
Periphery
Summer Slaughter Tour
@ House Of Blues
Hollywood, CA
July 20, 2012
All Photos © Kaley Nelson - www.KaleyNelson.com
If ever there was a band that deserved a better place to play for this night, it is Periphery. The stage was almost non-existent and the lighting was horrible. There were times when you could not even see the band since the lighting was so uneven. My pictures reflect this. However, Periphery did not disappoint. They are technical wizards on their respective instruments. And they have fun on stage!
Si jamás fuera una banda que mereciera un mejor sitio para tocar, sería Periphery. Casi no existía algo que se llamaría un escenario y la iluminación era horrible. Había ocasiones en las que ni siquiera se podía ver la banda debido a las luces tan inconsistentes e irregulares. Mis fotos reflejan esto. No obstante, Periphery no me desilusionó. Todos los integrantes son magos técnicos en sus instrumentos respectivos. ¡Y se divierten en el escenario!
On Saturday 7 October 2017, UCL Urban Laboratory and Folkestone Triennial 2017 held the second event in the EDGE symposium series, exploring the concept of situated practice in contemporary art, architecture and urbanism. The events bring together practitioners and thinkers at three ‘edge’ locations connected by the High Speed 1 railway, which acts a geographical link and embodies ideas associated with community, connectivity and escapism.
In framing these events, we have considered 'edge' as: 'Where an area that is known or privileged meets another that is unknown or ignored; a point of balance between contrary or diverse phenomena; a place of connectivity and interaction.'
'Periphery' was a day of enquiry to consider the environs of the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. Investment for the 2012 Games brought rapid development to the previously neglected Stratford area. Here East, within the former press and broadcasting centre of the Games, is envisaged as a cluster of innovators and digital makers, whilst the Stratford Waterside development will bring new institutions including the V&A, Sadler's Wells, London College of Fashion, and UCL.
Keynote: Jill Magid and Do Ho Suh
Speakers: Amica Dall (Assemble), Anna Harding (SPACE), Jane Rendell, Kreider + O’Leary, Liza Fior (MUF), Oreet Ashery and Mi Park, Torange Khonsari (Public Works), and Stephen Pritchard
The series is organised by the UCL Urban Laboratory and Folkestone Triennial 2017, with additional support from the Slade School of Fine Art, UCL and The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL.
#EdgePeriphery
Periphery
@ The Wiltern
Los Angeles, CA
November 24, 2017
All Photos © Kaley Nelson Photography - www.KaleyNelson.com