Traveling with the Pope
Hi All, I've done some digging and have started sketching.
Here's an outline of my process: My plan is to follow three unrelated ideas and see where they lead. Then I'll pick one to develop. I have no preconditions on subject or materials - I'm leaving myself wide open. I have a file of text and image clippings I'm building on the computer. Periodically I'll print it out and start thinking with a pencil. Make a few observations and get an idea where the next steps might be. For sketching I'm using a Conté charcoal pencil on a pad of large newsprint. I have a kneaded eraser for minimal cleanup, otherwise I ignore it. That way I don't have to worry about getting precious with my sketch or the materials. It's newsprint! I can be free, loose and make as much of a mess as I want.
To begin with, I delved into the obvious. Pope + travel threw up an interesting fact about Pope John Paul II:
" Pope John Paul II travelled more miles as pope than all his predecessors combined, and as a result he was seen—in person—by more people than anyone else in history. He travelled approximately 721,052 miles, the equivalent of approximately 31 trips around the circumference of the Earth."
Then I found an image of Pope Francis, whom I admire, climbing the stairs to his plane. My favorite theme is water, light and vastness. So this first iteration is a sketch of Pope Francis walking to the edge of an infinity pool, about to step into space. Named Francis, and a demonstrably compassionate man, I have a squirrel perched on his shoulder and birds, fish and butterflies following him into the vastness of the Hubble field of galaxies.
In my next post I will throw out some interesting information I found out about Alexander Pope and we'll see where that goes. He was a character.

@Dan Dempster Yes, I can understand a project file when you've got a project like that, but I'm wondering how people organize images (including their own photos) and interesting facts or quotations that may prove useful someday. I've just noticed that Google Photos organizes by photos not only by place, time and recognizable people but also by objects such as trees, towers, etc. Maybe I should stop worrying and let Ms. Google handle it all.