Whitey’s

96th St and Second Avenue, New York

When I was a boy, living in the tall building in the background, right, there was a playground on this site which we called Whitey’s because the man who managed it was a Black man named Whitey. I can remember applying to him for the puck and sticks for an air hockey table that was sometimes set up there. The playground was a victim of the 2nd Avenue subway construction that went on for years and years (decades, really) before being abandoned (and eventually resuscitated). This is part of my project to capture memories from local residents as the neighborhood is rapidly gentrified.

Utopia

East Street, Farnham

I’m planning to enter a contest themed around the concept of “utopia,” Thomas More’s famous place-name from the Greek “no place” (but punning on “good place”). I have chosen to work on liminal spaces, those that are on the threshold between one place and another, spaces that are not places. Here, I present some recent candidates from my perambulations around Farnham. Click any of the images below (in the browser, not email) to see them larger.