It was exactly an assembly line. You could look into infinity down these rows of drawing tables.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
As long as I can remember, I was drawing or trying to create something.
My wife and I, unlike many intellectuals, spent five years working on assembly lines. We came to fully understand the criticisms of the industrial age, in which you are an appendage of a machine that sets the pace.
I'm a master assembler of Ikea furniture, in case anyone wants to know.
I was running an assembly line designed to build memory chips. I saw the microprocessor as a bloody nuisance.
I guess I didn't enjoy drawing very much. It was like homework.
IBM was the original contractor for much of the computer interface design on the film.
It's kind of like trying to make straight lines from curves, but involving shapes that sort of dictate what the curves are, if you like, and the difference between two separate pieces creates a third transitional piece if you like.
To put down an ideogram of a table so that people will recognize it as a table is not the work of a painter, but to sense it for a moment as a magic carpet with a leg hanging down at each corner is the beginning of a painter's imagination.
None of us knew what this power plant looked like. We had no schematic drawing.
They certainly aren't connected with the old geometric art. My work isn't geometric in that sense.