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Another, of My Many Unusual Assignments

Posted on December 2, 2023December 2, 2023 By Hey You

Here is another example of an unusual client.
I had studio space and was working by the hour at Barnum Commu­ni­ca­tions, (medical adver­tising) at 560 Pacific Avenue. This was just a few blocks away from Bowne & Co., Inc. which was creating an souvenir brochure for the British Petroleum’s accounting team for their part in the construc­tions of the Alaska Pipeline.

On March 12, 1968. on the ​“North Slope“ at Prudhoe Bay, there was the largest oil discovery in North America. Orig­i­nally, eight oil compa­nies owned the rights to the oil.
In 1970, there was a lawsuit to stop the project, delaying work for almost five years due to legal and envi­ron­ment issues.
The 800 mile pipe could not be buried, because the hot oil would melt the permafrost turning the ground support into mud where the pipes could bend and break open. So all had to be on platforms.
The oil began to flow and from 1977 to 1979, 1.5 million barrels of oil went down the Trans-Alaskan Pipeline System.
After 60 years, (on 8-27-2019) BP sold all of their Alaskan prop­erty for $5.6 Billion to Hilcorp Energy Co.
By law, Alaska is required to remove all traces of the pipeline after oil extrac­tion is complete. No date has been set for this removal, but plans for it are being updated continuously
This infor­ma­tion and these photos are cour­tesy of Wikipedia which offers a very good coverage of this subject.

Trans Alaska International
Trans Alaska International 
Alaska Pipeline System Luca Galuzzi
Alaska Pipeline System Luca Galuzzi 
Alaska Pipeline and caribou
Alaska Pipeline and caribou 

My connec­tion to this assign­ment was from my co-worker (another free-lance artist there at Barnum Commu­ni­ca­tions). Her friend at Bowne & Co., found out that I could do cartoons.
The first step was to (roughly) plan their booklet. I was given their instruc­tions as to the details in each of my full page cartoon / illus­tra­tions. All were to be a reminder of the years of work required of the BP accounting departments.
There were to be 26 photos of the BP teams. This thumb­nail plan was pretty close to the final arrangement.

The heavy use of black was an easy answer in suggesting oil.

Cover
Cover 
IFC
IFC 
Page 1
Page 1 
Page 2
Page 2 
Page 4
Page 4 
Page 5
Page 5 
Page 6
Page 6 
Page 9
Page 9 
Page 10
Page 10 
Page 12
Page 12 
Page 15
Page 15 
Page 25
Page 25 
Page 26 Back Cover
Page 26 Back Cover 

The letter, on the ​“Forward” page says:
​“During the final days of nego­ti­a­tion and drafting of the Unit Oper­ating Agree­ment for the Prudhoe Bay Unit, when tempers grew short — -and intel­lec­tual capacity and under­standing even shorter — -various partic­i­pants resorted to the cartoon as a means of relieving the over­whelming tension and fatigue…this was not the best of all possible worlds”.

— — — — — — — -—
Tuesday, May 3, 2011,
from the:
Office of Public Affairs, U.S. Depart­ment of Justice:

BP Explo­ration Alaska to Pay $25 Million Penalty for Alaskan North Slope Oil Spill
WASHINGTON – BP Explo­ration Alaska, Inc. (BP Alaska) will pay a $25 million civil penalty and carry out a system-wide pipeline integrity manage­ment program as part of a settle­ment for spilling more than 5,000 barrels of crude oil from the company’s pipelines on the North Slope of Alaska in 2006, the U.S. Depart­ment of Justice, the U.S. Envi­ron­mental Protec­tion Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Depart­ment of Transportation’s (DOT) Pipeline and Hazardous Mate­rials Safety Admin­is­tra­tion (PHMSA) announced today. The penalty is the largest per-barrel penalty to date for an oil spill.
 — — — — — — — — —
When I accepted the job in 1977 (design and finished art) for the booklet, i had already read of the envi­ron­mental contro­versy. Who could have known anything close to what there is to know, now?

Ann Thompson


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