I found a great blog: Cartophilia
Which led me to steak maps.
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Then the ever trendy Famille Summerbelle's decorations for a child's rooms
Matthew Cusik
Detail of Charlie's Angels, 2009 |
Leviathan, 2008 Illustrated bible, sumi ink, charcoal, chalk, on panel 45 x 64 inches
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Brenda Jones
"Actually, I use maps in the work often to signify a geographic place where I was when those thoughts were going through my head. Also, I sometimes use them because they really give a place to the person I was thinking of. Or, sometimes it is simply because they symbolize some time of journey to me and most of the works do have something to do with a journey of some sort or another...whether it is mental or geographic."
Marek Ranis and Maja Godlewska, Installation Artists
And a Quilter's Map.
Radical Cartography by Harold Fisk in 1944
I lost the name for this artist. If anyone finds it please let me know.
Ian hundley
Oberg Green, 2000
cotton, wool, silk & linen
70 x 70 inches
Emily Fischer
Fantastic. Haptic Lab's Haptician in Chief is Elizabeth Emily Fischer, who makes Soft Maps, quilts with map patterns stitched onto them:
"These heirlooms are meant to be used: wrap your children in them, have a picnic, pull them close during the next Nor'easter. Not only beautiful, these blankets can be used as a mnemonic tool. As your child grows up with a Soft Map, they learn to read their neighborhood and its landmarks in a tactile, easily remembered way."
Targets Acrylic on canvas, with wood frame 108x108 in | ||||||
Secret Kiss, 1999, knitted wool, 40 x 20 x 33 cm
City Drawings Series (Addis Ababa), 1997, pencil on paper 31 x 21 cm
Little Universe 2 , 2006, enamelled bronze, unique, 9 x 40 x 20 cm
Guillermo Kuitca
People on Fire, 1993
mixed media on canvas
76 x 110 inches
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Hey Jess,
ReplyDeleteThe miniature sculptures? The artist is Thomas Doyle. He was in a show at Mixed Greens over the summer.
Yonni