by Maria Popova
From tattoos to Thomas More’s Utopia, or what Moby Dick has to do with the nature of time.
We’re obsessed with
maps
— a fundamental sensemaking mechanism for the world, arguably the
earliest form of standardized information design, and a relentless
source of visual creativity. Today, we turn to seven fantastic books
that explore the art and science of cartography from seven fascinating
angles.
THE MAP AS ART
Map As Art, The: Contemporary Artists Explore Cartography
is the definitive overview of today’s bravest, boldest creative
cartography, featuring 360 colorful creations by well-known artists and
emerging visual experimenteurs alike, including
Brain Pickings favorites
Maira Kalman,
Paula Scher and
Olaful Eliasson.
Insightful essays by Gayle Clemans complement the maps and overlay a
richer sheath of insight onto the work and creative process of these
cartographic artists.
Matthew Cusick, 'Fiona’s Wave,' 2005
Cusick's oversized collages are painted with fragments of vintage
atlases and school geography books from the golden era of cartography,
1872-1945.
Qin Ga, 'Site 22: Mao Zedong Temple,' 2005
In 2002, China's Long March Project embarked upon a 'Walking Visual
Display' along the route of the 1934-1936 historic 6000-mile Long March,
and Beijing-based artist Qin kept tracked the group’s route in a
tattooed map on his back. Three years later, Qin continued the trek
where the original marchers had left off, accompanied by a camera crew
and a tattoo artist, who continually updated the map on Qin’s back.
We reviewed it in full
here.
YOU ARE HERE
You Are Here: Personal Geographies and Other Maps of the Imagination
is a beautiful and meditative compendium of maps and musings on maps
exploring, in the broadest possible terms, the human condition. Divided
into three sections — “Personal Geography,” “At Home in the World” and
“Realms of Fantasy” — the book features 50 full-color and 50
black-and-white cartographic illustrations, ranging from a humorous
diplomatic atlas of Europe and Asia to a canine view of the world to
hand-drawn maps of shelters along the Appalachian Trail.

A selection of diverse essays, from the academic to the personal to
the humorous, contextualize the maps within the larger conceptual
narrative exploring humanity’s compulsion to map and chart its place in
the universe.
FROM HERE TO THERE

We’re
longtime fans of the
Hand-Drawn Maps Association, an ongoing archive of user-submitted maps, diagrams and other spatial illustrations.
From Here to There: A Curious Collection from the Hand Drawn Map Association
is exactly what it promises — a delightful anthology of ephemeral
documents that give direction, from quirky doodles to remarkably
detailed drawings on anything from Dallas skate parks to questionable
tourist routes in Bulgaria’s mountains.

Eccentric yet unassuming,
From Here to There offers a charming visual treat and, in the process, reveals fascinating slivers of human stories.
RADICAL CARTOGRAPHY
An Atlas of Radical Cartography
is as much about the art of cartography as it is about social activism,
pairing artists, designers, architects, urban planners and cultural
institutions in an ambitious volume that explores mapping projects
across social justice, globalization, energy, human rights and more.
It features 10 eye-opening maps on everything from marginal land
settlement in Calcutta to the Los Angeles water cycle by 10 different
artists, alongside 10 compelling essays on sociopolitical issues examined through the prism of cartography.
An Atlas of Radical Cartography comes from
The Journal of Aesthetics & Protest,
an inspired editorial collective hosting dialogs and initiating art
projects that facilitate idea exchange and pro-social action.
STRANGE MAPS

Based on the excellent
blog of the same name,
Strange Maps: An Atlas of Cartographic Curiosities
features 138 of the most fascinating, absorbing and remarkable maps
from the blog’s 3-year history of culling the world’s forgotten,
little-known and niche cartographic treasures. From
the world as depicted in Orwell’s
1984, to a color map of Thomas More’s
Utopia, to the 16th-century portrayal of
California as an island
where people live like the Amazons, the book is brim-full of priceless
anecdotes from our collective conception of the world over the
centuries.
Strange Maps is one of our favorite
blog-turned-book success stories. We reviewed it in full
here.
CARTOGRAPHIES OF TIME

Since
antiquity, humanity has had an ongoing fascination with the nature of
time, struggling not only to understand it but to also visualize it and
thus make it more digestible, more tangible, more graspable.
Cartographies of Time: A History of the Timeline
traces the history of graphic representations of time in Europe and the
United States from 1450 to the present. The gorgeous, lavishly
illustrated collection of timelines features everything from medieval
manuscripts to websites to a chronological board game developed by Mark
Twain.
BibliOdyssey has a sneak peek.
Cartographies of Time
is easily one of the most beautiful books to come by in the past year,
both a treasure trove of antique artwork and a priceless cultural
timecapsule containing humanity’s understanding of time and place in the
larger context of existence.
MAPS OF THE IMAGINATION

On
a most fundamental level, maps are visual storytelling about the world —
about what exists in it, what matters in it, and where we belong
relative to it. In
Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer,
Peter Turchi explores how some of greatest storytellers in literary
history employed maps as narrative devices, revealing some remarkable
similarities between mapmaking, traditionally perceived as an analytical
science, and the art of writing fiction. From Melville to Nabokov to
Stevenson to the Marx Brothers, the book features hundreds of
extraordinary illustrations from and about iconic works of literature.
Maps of the Imagination
is a genre-defying gem that straddles art book, writer’s manual and
cultural critique in an utterly captivating way that makes you look at
both old maps and familiar fiction with new eyes.
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