Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Women's March on Montpelier

On January 21st, just one day after the inauguration of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States women from Montpelier joined 5 million others around the world as they took to the streets to demand equity and racial justice. It was the largest protest in the history of the United States. In tiny Montpelier, the turnout was the largest Green Mountain history to descend upon the Capitol. By 3pm, more than 15,000 protesters watched as speakers, musicians, and poets made their way to the podium planted atop the granite steps of the capitol.


Vermont State Capitol Building





 


A Muslim Girls for Change member reciting a slam poem



 

Former Governor Madeline Kunin
 





Senator Bernie Sanders










Stay tuned for the full story at Toward Freedom. For additional work and full portfolio visit my website.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Contemplating the Anthropocene

Over the past few years I've tried to shift my focus away from protests, events, and breaking news photography in hopes that I might return to more traditional documentary/fine art work. As time has passed I've become more interested in the changing landscape we find ourselves existing and/or constructing in contemporary America.

Lately, I'm interested in how our constructed landscape specifically reflects our cultural values and priorities. Here are the questions I've been trying to visually explore: How does our built environment interact with existing landscapes and ecologies? How does the built environment affect our social interactions in any given space or place? What's our relationship with our public spaces and civic spaces? What happens when our constructed landscapes are divorced from our cultural histories and traditions?

I've got a million and one ideas swirling in my head. Here are a handful of images that have emerged as I slowly venture deeper into the ideas and the inevitable questions they raise. This work is a continuation of my explorations of the New Topographics movement that I previously posted about. With any luck, I'll be pulling this project together (possibly hanging a show somewhere) in the coming months.

Click to enlarge.
















































The landscape of Vermont is changing. With any luck, these images will spark a conversation around what mechanisms are driving that change. The tourist-driven economy has fetishized the rolling hills and Green Mountains with postcard perfect imagery of quaint villages and villagers, but this is a false image that we've been selling to the tourists and to ourselves. It's time to re-imagine the creative output concerning the Vermont Landscape and revise our relationship to the land we've been left to manage.

Check out more of my work at my website, Like my page on Facebook, and follow me on Twitter.

Sunday, December 20, 2015

Random Photo Adventure in Charlotte

Here's to the joys of simply going for a drive and photographing freely and organically, without a thought in the world of "What am I going to do with these?! How does this fit into my project?!"

To that end.

Click to enlarge












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Thursday, October 22, 2015

Returning to Photography

At last! After months/years of radio production, graphic design, and a million miles of other work, I'm finally able to get back to the good old medium of documentary photography that I hold so dear.

It's not exactly a massive dump of photos tonight, just a few photographs of friends working on a nearby construction site. But what fun it's been to return to the style of working that I spent more than a decade mastering.

That said, here are some photos. I hope to be posting more frequently in the weeks and months to come.

If you'd like to see more of my work (or get in touch about projects and collaborations) check out my website, Facebook page, and Twitter handle.

-Dylan

Click to enlarge images



















Friday, July 10, 2015

East Mountain Radar Installation

So this is a particularly odd set of photos. A few friends and I took a long drive and hike out into the middle of nowhere to search for an abandoned radar installation.

Formerly meant to track Soviet aircraft coming over the pole and down the eastern seaboard, East Mountain has been abandoned since the mid-late sixties. Much of it looks like something out of mad max (with a healthy dose of teenage graffiti for good measure).

I've no idea if I'll ever use these images for anything, but it was a fun way to spend the weekend!























For more of Dylan's work visit is Facebook page, Follow him on Twitter, listen to his podcasts, and (of course) visit his website.





Saturday, June 20, 2015

Migrant Justices Marches on Ben & Jerry's for Milk with Dignity

Hello hello!

I haven't posted photos in quite a while so I'm super happy to show this quick set of images from today's in the Milk with Dignity National Day of Action by Migrant Justice and a coalition of other organizations that are standing up for human rights in the Ben & Jerry's supply chain.






 

























For more media work by Dylan Kelley visit his website, like his Facebook page, and follow him on Twitter.