In 1982, my cousin Steve and I were bored. Our family would go camping together in the wilderness of upstate New York, those campgrounds with sectioned off sites and souveneir stores. There was usually an activity hall with a jukebox and some games like ping pong or air hockey, or pinball machines (the kind with real bells and buzzers.) If we were really lucky, there would be a new video game like Asteroids or Berzerk, but these were rare. More often than not we'd just roam aimlessly, or sit around the campsite reading comics. We would draw as well, with large sets of finely pointed colored markers.

I'm not exactly sure how we entered into the "Burning Hotel" phase of our work. The idea evolved over time, probably a couple of summers. I guess it may have started with sitting around the evening campfires, maybe using some of our drawings as kindling, or seeing the sunday comics page smolder and burn. Our first sacrifice was a large paper cartoon man with polka-dotted underwear, tied to a stake in the middle of the fire. It quickly became apparent that this was only the beginning, that something... well, Bigger was in the air.

The answer came in the form of cardboard boxes, which we would cut and shape into run-down, fire trap hotels. The windows would be filled with little paper figures, family oriented scenes of fun-filled violence.


According to family photo albums, we created three of these time-wasting hotels, the above picturing the last and most successful outing. (Wish I still had that vintage Space Invaders T-shirt)


A Few Highlights-

~ The sign on the roof : Hotel Certain Death

The first and only FIREPROOF hotel

~ Graphitti on the walls : "Buzzy" Duke 'n' The Duke-ets Rule!

I really don't know what's going on

Don't read this ~ Ignore That

~ The center window in the second row from the top is one of my drawings, with a grinning red devil. The hippie guy on the right has a cloud of flies, and his shirt reads "Beer."


Finally, sunset arrived, and the inevitable conclusion. The family would cheer. I'm sure we hadn't heard of performance art, but in retrospect it all seems pretty avant-garde, huh? Well, maybe not. An interesting epilogue is that my cousin Steve went on to be a fireman, perhaps in an unconscious act of atonement?

Thanks for the memories, Steve!