image from World Map Project

World Map Project

As a representative system, a map must be fictional by definition. The ongoing World Map Project focuses on this fictionality highlighting particular ideological biases. The series of maps reveals some of the epistemological, and, at times, material substructures that are intrinsic to geographical information.

Some of the World Map Project works employ a mathematically-exact scaling of the world’s countries, which is based on specific statistics. These maps are developed through a process that treats nation states as isolated entities; they statistically grow or shrink independently of their geographic neighbours. Consequently, ‘editorial’ decisions are required in order to determine the arrangement and relative proximity of individual countries and continents, often producing unusual geographical configurations.

Gridlock: Sharla Sava

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Strains of thought: Monika Szewczyk

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World Views: Joachim Hirsch

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Off the Map: Alex Aylett

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