The eyes...

...follow one around the room. The effect is not that difficult to achieve and is one of the first things I was taught at art college along with where the student union was and to never expect to see stuff returned when loaned.

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Ink on newsprint with silver pins. 

Ink on newsprint with silver pins. 

Long, wide verandah...

The verandah I’ve been working on is long and wide. I reckon it’s a 7-barbecue verandah (evenly spaced). I have to allow for the table and lots of plants in pots. Maybe six barbecues. Not the enormous barbecues, the medium ones. A beautiful gum tree is Kardashian Orange in the afternoon light and I’ve seen a bright green tree snake in the branches before. At six o’clock mosquitoes use the verandah and we go inside.

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Low on ink and anti-venom...

On the verandah it looks like rain but I doubt it. I’ve run out of ink and I wanted to do some more trees and maybe a bit more of the verandah. I’m prepared because I have an oil pencil or two with me. Someone told me not to stray too far from the house in flip flops because of the snakes. 

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A few of my favourite things can now be yours...

At the local tip, I was given insight into the hidden sophistication of the community in which I’m living.  Fine paintings and opera records littered the site. Actually, someone has decided that these things belong in the tip, delivered them and chucked them into a metal skip. But then, an employee of the council has chosen them to be rescued and has salvaged them by placing them on a table beneath a sign saying ‘treasure’. That’s a powerful position to hold.

I’d like to think that stuff I considered worthless was reclassified by someone behind my back and placed on the treasure table, to be reinstated into our cluttered society.

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Government Printing Office designed in record time…

When I worked in an engineering office print room, I learned a lot about how printing worked, especially photocopying which is like printing. Years later, when I was commissioned to design the new Government Printing Office on the corner of Mary Street, I knew it would be a quick and easy job because of my background in printing and photocopying.

The brief was for a building that would house printing machines and photocopiers in long rows and other floors that had lots of wooden desks and chairs on wheels. I started work on the design in the morning and 30 minutes or so later it was entirely complete. I could hardly believe it took me that long. Of course, I employed some time-saving techniques. All the employees car parking is situated underground which meant there was no need to draw hundreds of cars parked around the foot of the building. And I didn’t draw the vertical and horizontal cross pieces on all of the windows. That would have taken forever and pushed the project over budget. Finally, all the photocopiers I put on the fourth level are black and white copiers because colour is far more expensive.

To celebrate how fast I designed this project, I included an atomic clock that virtually never loses time. The clock face took a lot of time to install, but I designed it in black which meant I didn’t need to buy extra paint and all that business.

I’m happy to say that the Government Printing Office came in well within budget and many months before the due date. Needless to say, the government saved millions because of this. Money that can be spent on much needed services like the Lottery and dog toilets in parks.

Clockface is visible toward the top of the southern wall facing Mary Street.

Clockface is visible toward the top of the southern wall facing Mary Street.