Melvin was born in South Carolina and brought up by
relatives in Brooklyn.
He was fascinated by science at high school, where he
also played bass and sang in a group. He was a student at the Technical Career
Institute when he developed symptoms of mental illness that worsened over time.
His girlfriend at the time was struggling with drug addiction.
He decided
to become a musician before eventually finding himself homeless on Wards
Island. The artist Andrew Castrucci came across Melvin's drawings in a homeless
drop-in centre in the mid-1980s and set up an exhibition to showcase them.
Melvin used a ball-point pen to draw on scraps of paper, scribbling countless
signs, forms, and mysterious formulae, some gleaned from books, their secret
known to no-one but him.
He spends weeks, even months, working on his drawings,
keeping them in his pocket or between the leaves of a book, and returning to
work on them years later.
Melvin Way's art has been admired by eminent critics such as
Jerry Saltz, who described him as "a mystic visionary genius". His
works are part of the world's largest collections of art brut and he has
recently been integrated into the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New
York.
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