As I work on The Map I record changes to the rules in a journal. I started it in 2003 when I resumed work on this project. I now also record changes in the color palette. Let me know if you'd like to see more!
This is one of the most interesting projects I have seen in a long time and I would love to see more. I hope you don't mind but I would like to share this information with the students I teach and will advise them to check out your blog.
Jerry's Map
In the summer of 1963 I began drawing a map of an imaginary city. The work started as a doodle done in the spare time I had while working at a tedious job. I continued to add to that map through the years until, in 1983, I set it aside to put my free time to other use.
The Map was stored in the attic of our home in Cold Spring, New York. It gathered dust. My son, Henry, found it one day while rummaging around. He brought it down to me and asked what it was. Seeing it then triggered me to dust it off and continue the project.
It now comprises almost 3100 individual eight by ten inch panels. Its execution, in acrylic, marker, colored pencil, ink, collage, and inkjet print on heavy paper, is dictated by the interplay between an elaborate set of rules and randomly generated instructions.
This is one of the most interesting projects I have seen in a long time and I would love to see more.
ReplyDeleteI hope you don't mind but I would like to share this information with the students I teach and will advise them to check out your blog.
I don't mind at all! Where do you teach, Melinda?
ReplyDelete