Disclosure: This description was prompted and edited by Bill Ritchie, in Microsoft’s current Copilot, an AI text generator for the second volume of Bill H. Ritchie's two-part autobiography. We traverse the years from 1991 to 2023. Ritchie, a trailblazer in the art world continues his life story. In the first book he told how he embarked on a remarkable odyssey that defied convention and reshaped the art, craft, and design of fine art printmaking.
At the tender age of 24, Ritchie secured a groundbreaking position—the youngest ever—in the vibrant city of Seattle. His appointment as a teaching artist in fine art printmaking at the University of Washington marked the beginning of a transformative chapter. But this was no ordinary academic journey; Ritchie's innovative spirit would soon set him apart, a maverick in academe.
The traditional classroom was too confining for Ritchie. Driven by a hunger for exploration, he wove technology into his art courses in the 1980s. Bill Ritchie's experiments disrupted the staid printmaking department and shocked the UW School of Art. Forced to leave the stifling ivory towers, by the 1990s the emergence of electronic arts opened with the Internet and would extend the boundaries of printmaking. Ritchie's vision blurred the lines between historic creativity and cutting-edge technology, birthing a new era dating back to the Paleolithic era when printmaking was invented.
Ritchie pushed the envelope. Printmaking was no longer confined to ink and paper; it now danced with video, performance, computer graphics, and games. His colleagues, patrons, and former students watched in awe, wondering at the audacity of his moves.
Telling all, Ritchie weaves rich, detailed tales. In his printed books he placed thousands of pictures to enliven the narrative, capturing moments shared with those who left their marks on his journey. QR codes link videos and backstories, bridging epochs—from prehistoric cave paintings to the digital age. The echoes of ancient handprints resonate, showing that explication transcends time if replicated creatively.
In a world illuminated and echoed by electronic media, Ritchie poses a poignant question: "Is there hope?" As climate change and global stressors threaten the future, his words resonate. Whether through brushstrokes or those fleeting, elusive pixels and here in eBook form and auxiliary Read Aloud option, Ritchie's legacy endures—a beacon for students of all ages, urging them to embrace creativity, defy boundaries, and find hope in the interplay of art, technology, and the human imagination.
A native of Washington State, Bill lived in the Yakima Valley from his birth in 1941 until he moved to Ellensburg to earn his BA degree at Central Washington University, graduating with honors in 1964. He married Lynda Fisher and the two moved to California where she supported him while he earned his MA degree at San Jose University in 1966. Upon graduation he was hired by the University of Washington School of Art in Seattle to teach printmaking. He resigned in 1985 at the rank of full professor to develop distance teaching enterprises while pursuing his art, craft and design to bring printmaking STEAM to people of all ages everywhere on the Web. Intimate with art and technologies, he blends writing, video, digital art with lifelong learning skills. He lives with his wife in Seattle near their Mini Art Gallery in the Uptown district of Queen Anne. The space serves as his workspace, art museum, and sandbox. Beside Google Play Books, his books are sold at Amazon and Lulu, including his full autobiography in two volumes titled, “Escape Emeralda.”