Gallery: The Guy Behind Garbage Pail Kids Has Been Cartooning With Code for 20 Years
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John Pound's been drawing cartoons entirely with code for over 20 years.
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It started when he bought his first computer, an Amiga, in the late '80s.
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He taught himself the early programming language PostScript to draw the comics.
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Here's an example of some recent work, much more abstract and geometric.
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Pound's recent output has been in a series of "sketchbooks."
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He sets his program to randomly generate one or two hundred compositions. Then he sends them to an on-demand printer and gets back a physical book.
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Everything you see here is randomly generated. Pound codes various modules that draw people, for example, but the code determines the position of the arms and the eyes, where they are on the page, their color, etc.
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Some are stark, minimalist pieces; others are dense and colorful, like the cheerful, chaotic work of Haruki Murakami.
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Some, with their slightly-varied repetitions and diagrammatic layout, are reminiscent of Chris Ware’s experimental comics; others feel like the type of graphics you’d find on clothes from a cool skate wear company.
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In every case, it’s hard to believe that they were drawn by a computer program.
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A detail from one of Pound's more chaotic compositions.
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These days, Pound sees randomness as a sort of collaborative partner.
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The compositions are random but only within the parameters he establishes. Ultimately, he says, they all exhibit his “accumulated taste and intuition” to some extent.
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See more on his site, [Code Cartooning.](http://codecartooning.tumblr.com)
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