Carolyn’s Team Pick:
Since 1963, Jerry Gretzinger has been imagining and re-imagining an imaginary map. It’s currently over 1,600 square feet, and it began as just a doodle:
“The map began as just a doodle. I just made little rectangles, and cross-hatched them, carefully, and I just kept adding more rectangles and I put a river in and some railroad stations, but there was this moment when I came to the edge of that sheet of paper, and got out another sheet of paper and put the two of them together, and I taped them together. That’s when I kind of realized, it had a life of it’s own.”
He has over 2,000 panels, many of which have been scanned and repainted with their originals archived. He has a spreadsheet with town populations, and cards that say things like “new forest” and “scan” and “the void” that tell him what is happening to the map that day. In the early 1980s, he wanted to experiment so he introduced collages (at different points, the map involves ink, pencil, acrylic paint, marker, collage, gouache, and watercolour, on paper and board).
There is also a mini-documentary, called “The Mapping of Jerry Gretzinger from 1963 to the Stopping Point,” which is available on Vimeo, or you can just watch it:
He also says:
“With 2,000 sheets that are being worked on over time, it’s like painting the Golden Gate Bridge — you never finish.”
And:
“Yes, it’s alive. It changes. My hand puts the paint on the paper and then I step back and say, wow, look at that, as if I was not the perpetrator. I’m just an observer. I’m good for another 20 years, probably.”
In some ways, I am intensely curious about random details of his life in the same way I want to look at pictures of writer’s desks (for the record, Gretzinger’s studio looks like this). Probably having a map that covers over 40 by 40 square feet that you’ve been working on for almost 40 years makes at least a little bit of a difference in the way you view the world. Gretzinger has a blog, which is how I know that he sometimes makes miniature tile versions of the map and leaves them in places for people to find, and that he sells prints and original panels on eBay or at art exhibits (after making copies first), and that he’s sometimes had friends in as guest artists since 2004. …But that’s it. On the other hand, it’s almost more interesting this way.
Feature image via Jerry’s Map.
this is really beautiful and inspiring, I think I’m going to go start a drawing project now. Thanks for the pick Carolyn
Thank you for sharing this. I think he’s a bit bonkers but the map is really rather beautiful and quite obviously a total labour of love so I fully support such (seemingly pointless) endeavours!
i love this so much!
Oh man. I used to obsessively draw imaginary maps as a kid (I write about it a little here: http://poorworkethic.blogspot.com/2010/09/on-naming-part-2.html), and I can still stare at them for ages. This is very beautiful.
This is relevant to my map-loving interests (see gravatar)
Beautiful obsession. Interesting pick!
i am in love with this. really incredible. great pick.
oh. that’s why we had an earthquake on the east coast.
wait, I thought that was because of the gays and their gay marriages?
This is my favorite thing I have read on Autostraddle. I’ve been a true believer for a while now, but now I’m sure you’re doing something magical and different.
I love that he realized that “all these people need to eat.”
I hope when he dies he gets to go to this place, and they will worship him as a king-like combination of Dumbledore/your grandpa/Bruce Springsteen.
pure genius.
I love maps and am all over this. Thanks for sharing it! He approaches it like a real-life (sort of) Sim City. I love it.
So I just finished the video and I think it’s both crazy and awesome that this guy has made up all these rules for the creation of this map. He’s the creator but also an observer as the map comes to life.
Fascinating. Thank you so much for sharing.