Here is a house for Meg that doesn’t seem to fit into the series, perhaps because it wasn’t a “new build,” but a “renovation,” additions tacked onto an old black and white photo…
Hockney’s Pearblossom Highway
Here is David Hockney’s Pearblossom Highway, 11-18 April 1986, #2. Several people mentioned that they thought of Hockney when they saw my “Houses for Meg” — a huge compliment to me, as Hockney is one of my favorite artists. His “joiners” are my favorite works of his: huge photo collages made up of hundreds of individual 4×6″ prints.
In this video Hockney talks more about the piece and its origins:
(I had no idea it was originally commissioned by Vanity Fair to illustrate Humbert Humbert’s drive across the southwest in Lolita.)
Here’s a 1988 feature of him returning to the site and showing how he took the shots:
Oh, one fun thing: when you zoom in on the collage the Getty website serves up a bunch of different chopped up .jpegs. I downloaded them and put them in an ImageQuilt and hit shuffle:
Filed under: David Hockney, collage
Angry and curious (a zine)
My latest zine. More here. (There’s a list of links to all the sources at the end of this post.)
Sources: 1. John Baldessari. 2. Liam Gallagher, about his brother, Noel. 3. Etta James, Rage to Survive. 4. Marc Maron. 5. Joan Rivers, Piece of Work. 6. Seinfeld, “The Marine Biologist” 7. Hugh Laurie. 8. Maurice Sendak. 9. PiL, “Rise.” 10. The Clash, “Clampdown.” 11. Ron Padgett, “How to be Perfect.” 12. bell hooks. 13. Henry Rollins. 14. Robert Louis Stevenson, Treasure Island. 15. Alex Trebek. 16. Walter Isaacson. 17. Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, #1755, “Curiosity.” 18. John Waters. 19. The California Raisins. 20. Django Unchained. 21. Iggy Pop. 22. Albert Einstein. 23. Steve Jobs. 24. Graham Swift, Waterland.
Ways of Seeing… with penguins
A silly mashup in a serious time: John Berger’s Ways of Seeing + penguins visiting the Nelson-Atkins.
Berger’s book based on the series is one of my favorites. Here’s a map of it I drew of it in 2008, back when I drew other people’s books in stead of my own…
Advice from a caterpillar
“Who are you?” asks the Caterpillar, in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
Alice replies, “I—I hardly know, Sir, just at present—at least I know who I was when I got up this morning, but I think I must have been changed several times since then.”
Alice is changing and she is confused. She looks for sympathy from the Caterpillar. “When you have to turn into a chrysalis—you will some day, you know—and then after that into a butterfly, I should think you’ll feel it a little queer, won’t you?”
“Not a bit,” says the Caterpillar.
I keep thinking about Sam Anderson’s piece about about what caterpillars actually go through inside their cocoon:
Terrible things happen in there: a campaign of grisly desolation that would put most horror movies to shame. What a caterpillar is doing, in its self–imposed quarantine, is basically digesting itself. It is using enzymes to reduce its body to goo, turning itself into a soup of ex-caterpillar — a nearly formless sludge oozing around a couple of leftover essential organs (tracheal tubes, gut).
Only after this near-total self-annihilation can the new growth begin. Inside that gruesome mush are special clusters of cells called ‘‘imaginal discs,’’ which sounds like something from a Disney movie but which I have been assured is actual biology. Imaginal discs are basically the seeds of crucial butterfly structures: eyes, wings, genitalia and so on. These parts gorge themselves on the protein of the deconstructed caterpillar, growing exponentially, taking form, becoming real. That’s how you get a butterfly: out of the horrid meltdown of a modest caterpillar.
What will we look like when we emerge from our own meltdowns?
I am trying to remember: Beautiful things grow out of shit.
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