mapping

May 23, 2008

trip the elastic fantastic

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Big props to Archinect's Aaron Plewke who managed to wrangle reviews of MoMA's Design and the Elastic Mind exhibition out of a bunch of ne'er-do-well architects, designers, and thinkers. My contribution (an extension of wig in a box) is included among a fine bunch: Brian Moroz, Rosten Woo (who nails review with the line "...being there feels less like stuffy MoMA and more like being at a world’s fair or Expo 86"), Michael Surtees, Adam Greenfield (blessedly barbed as ever), Addie Wagenknecht, and Fred Scharmen. The exhibit is kinda great and kinda muddled. Having seven reviewers wade through it doesn't exactly create a common consensus as much as it surveys the messy territory. On the other hand, since the show feels like it springs from Internet culture, it seems homey and appropriate to have multiple posts.

Everyone's featured here.

May 22, 2008

fwd: thinking

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Braulio of Architect magazine just wrote in to say that his new blog, Fwd: Architecture, is finally live. I've been on the receiving end of his link-filled emails for awhile, so I know that he's got great, broad taste in architecture, music, and tech.

And I am totally biased, since Fwd: Architecture's second post links to an article I wrote on 4-D Cities. That piece covers research going on at Georgia Tech. The team's developing software that creates a 4-D virtual model of the urban environment out of historic and new photographs. If it resembles Photosynth, that's because both spring from the same research department and have similar core code. But 4-D Cities adds a snazzy timeline to the program making it possible to time travel the model.

March 23, 2008

mouthy motor city

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Quick props to my friend Kirsten Palm who's new book, The Straits, was just published by Palm Press. Kirsten is a Detroit native who now lives in San Francisco.The book is two narrative essays on her hometown.

The jacket copy reads:

In The Straits, Kristin Palm presents us with a portrait of the mythological city of Detroit. By tracing its construction and destruction, Palm invokes the glory and tragedy of America in the 20th century. Among Palm’s lyric narrative of the names and places, the ruins of Detroit represent promise and possibility as a model for urban landscapes.

I can't wait to get my hands on a copy.

March 17, 2008

grafting

Mapping

Web meme as guerrilla marketing? PFSK recently posted a graph generated by a script that transforms HTML tags into lovely organic pattern: blue for links, violet for images, and orange for line breaks and block quotes.

Enter a site and let the graph grow. As it makes the rounds, pinged to and fro, the site spreads word of Salathe Marcel's art project 356specialdays.com. The concept is so sweet, it makes me feel cynical for calling attention to the self promotion.

365specialdays.com is a conceptual online and offline art project. If one day of the year is a special day for you, let me know and I will create a drawing of what made that day so special for you. You will then get the drawing by postal mail, and I will upload the drawing to this website (including your story - anonymously if you prefer). Over time, this website will be a collection of special days all over the world, and remind us just how special each and every day can be.

December 27, 2007

gone traipsing

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"-Look at him, says he. Breen. He's traipsing all round Dublin with a postcard"
(Ulysses 12.257)
Via Aida Yared's incredible Joyce Images, an illustrated Ulysses using period documents and ephemera.

I leave tomorrow for a Glen Hansard-inspired trip to Dublin, Ireland. I look forward to a Joycean wander around the city punctuated by cups of tea and pints of beer. Surely, there will be a stop at the Guinness Storehouse. Remodeled by RKD Architects in 2002, it boasts an atrium shaped like a pint glass and topped by viewing/drinking deck with the best views of Dublin. Sláinte, indeed.

More reports in January. Happy New Year.

December 13, 2007

and visions of networks danced in their heads

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Grant Miller, Untitled (UA-33), 2006

Friday night the Black and White Gallery in Chelsea opens Constructed Realities, a show by Kansas City-based artist Grant Miller. The work, seen here, certainly is an attempt to depict network culture in a colorful, party-like-it’s-1992 way. The paintings recall Julie Mehretu’s layered, map-like creations, but without the cultural and political critique. (Detroit Art Institute reopened November 23 with Mehretu’s show City Sitings.) Miller’s world is a multihued Tron.

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Julie Mehretu, Black City, 2007

Networks are all the rage this week. The Living presented The Living City project at the Van Allen Institute. I am still not sure why coolhunter DeeDee Gordon was asked to be part of the conversation, but then I had to leave early. I must have missed that part of the puzzle. (She did look surprisingly sedate with long, dark hair and a black ensemble. I was hoping for some bling.)

More on Friday: The Architecture League launches the Situated Technologies Pamphlet series with Urban Computing and Its Discontents. Adam Greenfield, Mark Shepard, and Eric Paulos will gather for a panel, which hopefully will expand upon ideas brought up in last year’s conference.

November 04, 2007

sonic highway

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Courtesy Brooklyn Vegan.

Harmonies, hula hoops, and honking horns. On Friday I caught Sufjan Steven’s performance of The BQE at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), joining some 2,000 fellow aging hipsters decked out in glasses and corduroy and armed with iPhones. If we all disappeared in a Moscow-type tragedy, would Apple sales dip? In the opera house lobby I nearly bumped into BAM regular Lou Reed, thrillingly and neatly bringing my Velvets/Warhol thread full circle. (Apparently Reed and Laurie Anderson attended the evening before, so he was coming back for a repeat performance.)

Sufjan’s composition, commissioned by BAM, is an ambitious addition to his geographic interpretations Illinoise and Michigan (two entries in his Fifty States Project). Sonically taking on Robert Moses’s gritty highway with a thirty-piece orchestra.

Clashing strings and horns evoke swelling traffic jams. Flutes zip through the score, changing lanes with ease. Sufjan paired the music with an abstract film and live hula hoopers. The result is equal parts beautiful, quirky, and a love letter to Brooklyn. With Super-8 shots of neighborhood landmarks and signs—there’s the bright yellow storage building near my house; look, the ugly new loft going up—recognition draws you into the piece.

The BQE is part of a history of orchestrated city interpretations. And there is certainly an Eamesian and Koyaanisqatsi quality to Sufjan’s footage, but I was reminded immediately of the 1927 Berlin: Symphony of a Great City, which uses the railroad to track the daily life of the city in much the same way as the BQE organizes Sufjan’s Brooklyn. (See Mitchell Schwarzer’s Zoomscape.)

In program notes the musician muses on the mash up of car wheels and hoops:

Perhaps a creative exegesis of the hoop might begin to unravel the bureaucratic mysteries of the interstate roadway, the automobile, and the Hula Hoop’s unlikely nemesis: Robert Moses. A renowned critic of idle recreation, Moses often orchestrated his park projects around more competitive, athletic endeavors: mammoth swimming pools, diving boards, baseball diamonds, and tennis courts. These hefty, utilitarian designs were modern responses to Frederick Law Olmstead’s romantic topography intended for less strenuous activities: afternoon strolls, Sunday picnics, and, perhaps, Hula Hooping. Of course, there was nothing natural, bucolic, or egalitarian about Moses’s park designs: blocky, boxy cement landscapes that resembled more prison yard than public park. Indeed, his roadways often took this aesthetic to the extreme. Like most highway projects of the time, the BQE was an execution of bullishness mixed with economic fastidiousness, a project that championed commerce, cars, and the commuter work force in spite of the “disorderly” charm of Brooklyn’s network of villages and neighborhoods, settled long before the automobile.

Although the triad is almost too much to watch at once, all parts came together at for one brilliant moment: five hula hoopers twisting their hips in unison, speedy road music, and film of driving at night. The conceit drops away leaving only rhythm and motion.

September 19, 2007

justice league

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CampBaltimore
Listening, Collaboration, Solidarity

Next week LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) opens the truly compelling Just Space(s) exhibition and symposium. Curated by Ava Bromberg and Nicholas Brown, the show features some thirty artist and organizations, including:Trevor Paglen, the Center for Urban Pedagogy (CUP), Markus Miessen & Patricia Reed, Teddy Cruz, and the Spatial Information Design Lab (SIDL).

Just Space(s) aims not merely to show what is unjust about our world, but to inspire visitors to consider what the active production of just space(s) might look like. It asks a crucial question: “How do we move from injustice to justice exactly where we stand – in our neighborhoods and our institutions, at the level of the body, the home, the street corner, the city, the region, the network, the supranational trade agreement and every space within, between, and beyond?”

I am blown away by breath of actively-engaged work represented and I am disappointed that I can’t be there for the symposium. I’d love someone to go and report back.

An Atlas, an exhibition of “radical cartography” and text, which blends art, maps, and activism, is on view concurrently with Just Space(s). Organized by artists Lize Mogel and Alexis Bhagat, the show goes hand in hand with the publication, An Atlas of Radical Cartography, (upcoming Fall 2007, Journal of Aesthetics and Protest Press, Los Angeles.)

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FWB
The New Yorkers' Guide to Military Recruitment in the 5 Boroughs

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Adrian Blackwell
Detroit's Underdevelopment

July 26, 2007

wayfinding (or over, under part 2)

Iconic

I’m working on an article about Digital Urban run by Andrew Hudson-Smith at the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London and I am in love with this image they created as part of the 3D London Underground map. For Hudson-Smith it “led to a new look at iconic images to communicate locational and spatial data.” For me, it is a fabulous pastiche of the 1930s original, pre-Nolli maps, and those great Americana road maps where landmarks are interconnected by freeways. (See Nick Paumgarten's piece from last year, Annals of the Road, in the New Yorker.)