View allAll Photos Tagged caliban
Fotos del Concierto de Trivium + Caliban + Upon a Burning Body en La Riviera, Madrid. Para REVOLVER España
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Caliban owns Sabretooth!
Poor Sabretooth. In almost every shot I've done of him, he's getting wrecked. And that ain't Sabretooth; he's a tough dude! I'll have to remedy that. Also, this is my first pic featuring Caliban.
What do you think of these two figures? Let me know in the comments.
Have fun, and happy collecting!
Everything but the stars and the lens flare is in-camera in this shot. The ship is lit beautifully from the interior, but unfortunately I couldn't shoot that part in an easy way.
Desmidiea is a fresh water algae, and as it seems, algae is one of my favourite things to crochet. :o)
I found this great poster by Ernst Haeckel, here on flickr, and it really inspired me. As usual my goal is not to make it look real but to make a three dimensional of something flat. :o)
'Caliban' at 'Melkweg, Oude Zaal', Amsterdam on Tuesday, 20th of May 2014.
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I went to see the performance of Shakespeare's The Tempest by the Lord Chamberlain's Men at Chatsworth last night. I thought it was brilliant. This is Calliban played very expertly by Reece Richardson.
Going back 28 years to the Christmas of 1985 the Lakeside and Hatherthwaite santa specials were in the joint charge of Barclay 2333 and Peckett 1925 Caliban.
In those days an old fire tender was used to resupply the water. This view was taken at Lakeside.
Sommeil de Caliban
Odilon Redon, pseudonyme de Bertrand Redon
(1840, Bordeaux - 1916, Paris)
Musée d'Orsay
One of the many songs played by the Caliban’s dream at the Eastbourne heritage event , Motcombe gardens
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Franz Marc (1880-1916) was a painter and printmaker, and one of the key artists in the German Expressionist movement. Fascinated by futuristic and cubist styles, he used form and symbolism to convey his message about humanity. He is known for his brightly colored animals.
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Irwindale, California, 2014
Los Angeles Flickr Group Meet-Up at the 52nd Annual Renaissance Pleasure Faire of Southern California.
Yeah... changed his name. Sindri is now Caliban. Or Cal. Whichever. >w< This is from the photoshoot in the park. So... oldspam!
I went to see the performance of Shakespeare's The Tempest by the Lord Chamberlain's Men at Chatsworth last night. I thought it was brilliant. This is Calliban played very expertly by Reece Richardson.
Metaverse Shakespeare Company’s 2010 Main Canon: Twelfth Night, Act 2
– Open-Ended Run
Shakespeare, Second Life—The Metaverse Shakespeare Company (MSC),
formerly SL Shakespeare Company (SLSC), next Tuesday will open its
long-awaited 2010 Main Canon production of Twelfth Night, Act 2—“As
you will it!” in an open-ended run to occur every Tuesday at 6 PM SLT
(PT), and every Sunday at 1 PM SLT (PT). Set to occur at the 4-sim SL
Globe Theatre (http://visit.mshakespeare.com) in the virtual world of
Second Life—this live theatrical performance, available anywhere with
an Internet connection, continues the troupe’s 2009 production of
Twelfth Night, Act 1—but, with a fresher, riper take, and its own
amalgam of the year’s innovations in virtual theatre.
Artistic Director Ina Centaur has crafted an interpretation that
conveys the topsy-turvy nature of the play and the era of its
creation, without being bound by the constraints of a
historically-accurate production, “Even though this production is set
in a pre-modernity ‘generic past,’ there’s still plenty of Elizabethan
bawdry and notions… There’s the presentation of class-crossing as a
ridicule-prone absurdity and some intense visual portrayal of that
heavily-cozy-explicit language—with a wild bit where a drunk-betimes
Sir Toby Belch urinates live on-stage to ‘[fill] an unfill’d can
(II.iii).’ Says Centaur on the music of Twelfth Night and the spirit
of the open-ended run, “We’re providing sheet music and
instrumental-only clips for all of our songs on the mShakespeare Blog,
so that audience members can sing along with our live show (with their
SL mic’s off, in the privacy of their own home) or in their own
Metaverse Shakespeare theatre-inspired karaoke events... For most
shows, we’re sticking with an orthodox interpretation and traditional
songs, drawn from eras before and Shakespeare’s contemporaries. But,
this being an open-ended run, be braced for variations, and character
metamorphosis—in both act and appearance.”
This Open-Ended run of Twelfth Night, Act 2—“As you will it!”, like
Act 1, will evolve into a final form, per audience interaction on the
play’s progression. These interpretations are based on archetypes,
grounded in the play’s intrinsic elements, such as character
relationships. In April, the troupe will begin weaving “Variations” to
its main interpretation, where certain characters will undergo some
dramatic metamorphoses. Antonio and Sebastian will oscillate between
varying degrees of a close-friendship, from the orthodox
interpretation of caring-companionship to, in the words of Artistic
Director Ina Centaur, “a homo-erotic or quasi-masochistic
relationship... to finally settle down and arrive at the one that fits
best!” Most curiously, Malvolio, that time-weathered face, will
de-age, becoming, as described by an anonymous patron, “a complexion
that e’en you may fancy”, in the virtual world’s take on new
scholarship interpretations of Shakespeare’s tragic villain-victim as
a young man. For select shows, gender-experimentation interpretations
will manifest in all-female or all-male or even switched-gender
productions of the play. The troupe will once again show its April
Fools “Super Spoof” edition in a special performance on Thursday,
April 1, that will explore the character relations of Shakespeare’s
Twelfth Night via a medley of parodies inspired by popular modern
shows.
While this will be the troupe’s first production under its new name of
Metaverse Shakespeare Company, Centaur asserts that the production
continues to uphold the company’s founding ideals of creating quality,
memorable productions, while developing this nascent field of virtual
theatre, “As with every Main Canon production, we spend about a
thousand hours rehearsing and analyzing, building and designing, and
also applying new technologies to virtual theatre… For Twelfth Night,
Act 2, our three technological innovations include the usage of
physics, moving automatons, and visual illusion on the virtual stage.
You’ll see physics on-stage, in both built-in and scripted forms in
our apple catches in Scene 3, and wilting rose motif in Scene 4—and,
in the crawlspace of Scene 3, you’d see prim-based automaton actors in
the form of rats!”
Special to this production, the MSC introduces the concept of
“crowdsourced interactive set design,” which allows anyone to submit a
graffiti message or poster/flyer idea to be plastered onto the “City
Wall of Illyria” set in Act 2, Scene 1. More details at
The live show, presented via SL Voice, is also available in
closed-captioning with dynamic subtitles in English, Esperanto,
French, German, Italian, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese, and Spanish.
The play stars Alestria Corryong, Caliban Jigsaw, Constantine Paulino,
Ina Centaur, Kerry Takashi, and Pipsqueak Albatros, with additional
guest actors to appear in select shows.
Starting March 2, shows occur
Tuesdays at 6 PM SLT (PT)
Sundays at 1 PM SLT (PT)
only at the SL Globe Theatre at Shakespeare (255,255,25), Second Life
All shows are free (“pay as you will”), except for VIP performances,
occurring on the last Tuesday and Sunday of each performance month.
About Twelfth Night, Act 2
Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night is a multiplot story with plentiful songs
and bawdry topsy-turviness. On one hand it’s the story of a
shipwrecked girl named Viola, whose choice to go incognito as a boy
eunuch results in myriad complications—including a gender-bending love
triangle. On another, it chronicles the fallacious rise and tragic
fall of a Puritanical steward named Malvolio, who becomes a victim of
his too-lofty dream. Act 2 sets the basics for his downfall—his
dysfunctional relationship with the other servants provokes a
practical joke involving a certain forged letter, that would
eventually ruin him—but, Act 2 sparks only of joviality; tragedy is
due in a later act.
About the Metaverse Shakespeare Company (mShakespeare)
Headquartered in the virtual world of Second Life (SL), the Metaverse
Shakespeare Company (MSC) is the flagship project of sLiterary’s
Virtual Reality Shakespeare Initiative (VRSI). MSC is a professional
virtual theatre company that embraces the best of what the metaverse
has to offer. While it is primarily known to provide quality live
Shakespearean theatre available to anyone in any location, MSC is also
the curator of the most historically accurate theatres and
architecture in virtual worlds relating to William Shakespeare.
Website: mshakespeare.com
Press Center: mshakespeare.com/press
Blog: blog.mshakespeare.com
Playbills: playbills.mshakespeare.com
Programmes: programmes.mshakespeare.com
About sLiterary
sLiterary, Inc. is a nonprofit organization dedicated to furthering
literary and artistic endeavors in Second Life and other virtual
worlds.
About Second Life
Second Life is a free online virtual world imagined and created by its
residents.
Neither the Metaverse Shakespeare Company nor sLiterary is affiliated
with Linden Lab. Second Life is a trademark of Linden Lab. No
infringement is intended.
'Caliban' at 'Melkweg, Oude Zaal', Amsterdam on Tuesday, 20th of May 2014.
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Keen railway enthusiasts; not worried by Health and Safety issues!
'Caliban', an 0-4-0 saddle tank, was built by Peckett and Sons at their works in Bristol in February 1937. It was built for Courtaulds and worked at their Red Scar rayon mill in Preston.
When its working life at Courtaulds was over, the locomotive was preserved, being taken to Steamtown, Carnforth. It then went to the Lakeside and Haverthwaite Railway but is now in the care of the Furness Railway Trust at the Ribble Steam Railway in Preston.
Actors from a production of one of my favourite Shakespeare plays, The Tempest - I wonder if this chap is Caliban?
Self-Portrait of the Moment:
I got a lot of detritus thrown my way today, and it left me feeling awful. So, I took a page from our college days and took an ENTIRELY UNFLATTERING self-portrait as catharsis.
If someone chooses to berate me -- this is about how I can end up feeling about myself, if I'm not careful. (I figure it's better to take symbolic photos than dictate some screed here to incite others.)
I made some changes to little Caliban. I love the way her lips came out and even though her makeup is a little messy, I think it suits her.