Kenny Klein with Stapler

Kenny Klein with Stapler
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Saturday, December 15, 2012

New Orleans Color


 New Orleans is a colorful city. I mean that in every sense. While Autumn here may not be the color-fest it is in New England or Upstate, New York, we have our own colorful displays for the season.

Anyone who reads this blog knows I do a lot of photography, and that I keep photo galleries on my site (http://kennyklein.net/photo.htm). On my computer I keep a file called "New Orleans Misc." for photos I take around town that have no designated blog or other purpose at the moment. The file is full of colorful NOLA shots, so I thought I'd share some photos of the colors of New Orleans.

 Above: the gate outside my house. Below: the little bit of Autumn foliage we enjoy...





I love the look of an old, weathered wrought iron fence or gate. Here are some, bounding colorful gardens. In the Garden District, of course.

 


  Above: cemetery gate. Below: oak roots.



I also love the look of our weathered brick sidewalks. 








Even our garbage cans are colorful...

The colors of houses in the Garden District and in the Bywater.










Above: Quentin Tarantino's Hallowe'en display. Tarantino owns a house in the Bywater. The owl is attached to what seems to be a hydrolic drill.



Statuary: Mary (above) and Diana (below).




Musicians at the Magazine Street Blues Festival. 


From New Orleans, this is Kenny Klein, photographing it all.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

What I've Been Doing...

I feel kind of awful that I haven't posted a blog in a month now. In my defense, I've been busy. I moved to a new apartment a month ago---anyone who has moved knows how stressful that is! But it's a really nice apartment in the Lower Garden District, a very beautiful neighborhood. I am now just a few blocks from Lafayette Cemetery #2, the creepiest cemetery in NOLA, and from LaSalle Park, where the Mardi Gras Indians parade on the weekend closest to Saint Joseph's Day.

 Two views of Lafayette Cemetery #2.

 I've also been putting together a new band. While I've been using the band name Darwin's Monkey Wrench for concerts while on tour, Darwin's Monkey Wrench has always been an ever-changing ensemble of whichever musicians I can convince to show up. Now the band will have permanent members (or as permanent as musicians can be...) with a focus on my original songs, and on traditional Swing and Jugband music. We've done our very first gig together here in NOLA, and will be playing at the Homegrown Harvest Festival this Friday, and at the Kerry Irish Pub next week. So far, everything sounds pretty good. 

 Darwin's Monkey Wrench, above; singer Carolyn Broussard below. Carolyn is the singer on my Black Cat Blues CD. That truck is in the yard of my new home... no one knows why.


Another new situation is that I have a room here set up as my photo studio, something I did not have in my former apartment. Below are a few photos I've been taking in my new studio, and around NOLA. You can see more on my gallery site. Advisory: there are nudes in my gallery.

 Model Dawn Day in my studio.


 Model Siffa Scary. Siffa speaks to young women about cutting and eating disorders through her video blog; the photo below is part of a shoot illustrating those issues.

 Lauren and Stephanie in the studio (above), part of a fairy tale shoot; and in Day Of The Dead make-up at Gryphon's Nest (below).

I'm back in the swing of writing, and I will have new posts up in a timely manner. See you soon!

Monday, August 20, 2012

Freaks And Geeks: Gencon!! (Part 1)


Most of my readers know that I'm on tour at the moment. In fact, I am in the final week of my tour. In a week from today, I begin my journey back to NOLA. And I cannot wait to be home!
But the tour is a good one, and I just came from a pretty amazing event; Gencon. Lauren and I spent four days and nights in Indianapolis, Indiana at the event that gamers call “The Best Four Days In Gaming.”

Geeks who read this will know immediately what Gencon is; the world's largest gaming convention. By gaming I mean role playing games, (either played with cards and dice, like Dungeons and Dragons, or LARPs, Live Action Role Playing Games), computer games, empire-building board games, even games familiar to non-geeks like Risk. The con was originally created by Gary Gygax, the creator of Dungeons And Dragons. It is now run by Gencon LLC, who do a pretty amazing job of hosting one of the greatest conventions I've ever seen.

Now to someone not familiar with gaming this may sound odd; why would people attend a convention for games? But to people who were there (all 40,000 of them!) this is about the biggest event in their gaming lives. People have the option of playing their game of choice with thousands of other players; they can visit booths in the stadium-sized dealer room and try new games; they can attend workshops that teach new games or new gaming skills; they can play familiar games with completely new players; and game companies time the launch of new games to this convention, which allows gamers to get “hooked” by playing the game for hours.

In a convention center the size of some cities, and in adjacent hotels, constant gaming goes on everywhere. Huge halls are devoted to gaming, and hundreds of people will play a single type of game in a hall the size of a gymnasium. Games go on in rooms throughout the convention center, and in rooms of all the adjoining hotels. There is almost nowhere one does not see games. And players will play literally around the clock. One year I saw a game in the lobby of the hotel the con had put me up in. That game was going when I left the hotel on Thursday to play in the halls; when I returned Thursday evening; when I left the hotel Friday morning; when I returned Friday evening; The same game, with the same players, went on fairly continuously until Sunday. That's how Gencon works. 
 As if that's not enough, “pick-up” games break out in hotel lobbies, in hallways, and in food courts. The mall, which is attached by a skyway to the convention center (as are all of the hotels) has pick-up games going on in its hallways and food courts. And LARP players are everywhere, using the city of Indianapolis as their environment for gaming.
 Above and below, games being played in enormous halls at the convention center.

Games being played off-schedule in the food court (above) and the hallway (below).


 A game at a dealer's booth.

People with other focuses are there too. There is all sorts of entertainment: I am one of about a dozen performers hired by the con to play for attendees. I play fiddle and banjo in the hallways, (as well as providing programming for my fellow doll collectors: more about that later). Other acts also perform in the hallways, and some play scheduled shows in rooms of the convention center. Movies are shown every afternoon and evening of the con, both science-fiction/horror films, and anime (Japanese animation). There is also a masquerade ball held on the Saturday evening of the event.
Lauren, Kim and I playing in the hall.

Dan The Bard

A Klingon band (above), and The Great LukeSki (below).


Pirate singers Marooned (above), and the brilliant juggler and comedian Rusty Bawls (below).

Another focus of the con is science-fiction, present in some of the movies shown, in the costumes of attendees, and in the hiring of speakers. In fact, the guests of honor at the con this year were Star Trek alumni Wil Wheaton (Wesley Crusher of STNG), and Nichelle Nichols, original Star Trek's Uhura (the first AA female to hold an officer's rank on television). Other sci-fi characters are represented throughout the con, such as British sci-fi series Doctor Who, and the American movies about the comic superheroes The Avengers, as well as the usual Star Wars and Batman/Dark Knight portrayals.
Yes, that's a storm trooper in a kilt...

The Tardis, the time travel spaceship of Doctor Who. 

 Guest of honor Wil Wheaton.
Lauren fends off Doctor Who's arch-nemesis, a Dalek.
There is a HUGE Anime presence at Gencon. I've been in the con scene for maybe three decades, and I remember when there was the stereotype that all gamers were nerdy guys who couldn't get a girlfriend, or even speak to a girl. (I honestly do remember a conversation years ago in the con-suite, the VIP room of a con, where several men sat in a circle and spoke about which Star Trek female was the hottest: it broke into a discussion of how you would not be able to mate with a Vulcan girl because their blood is copper-based. All this occurred while a scant few actual human females sat on the edges of the room, alienated from the conversation). Anime is one of the elements that has completely changed that. The Anime scene has brought scores of young women into the science-fiction/gaming community, often with their boyfriends or boy friends. Now, probably half or more of the women you see who are under 30 are dressed as Anime characters at cons. This is especially true of the girl teens and kids. I had conversations about this with several friends and con attendees, and the general consensus is that anime is the first medium to consistently have strong female characters, something you did not see in my generation's comics and movies (example: in classic Star Trek, Uhura outranked Chekov and Sulu; every time Kirk left the bridge in the command of one of these two characters, he should have left it to Uhura. The show's producers feared that audiences would not respond well to a woman being in command of the Enterprise). Role playing games have also started creating strong female characters (examples, Lara Croft, and Alice of Resident Evil, both role playing games that inspired movies with female leads), and women over twenty-five are responding to these portrayals. 
Just a few of the Anime costumes sported by young women at Gencon.