»Conquest Russia !« (2007) by Olga Kisseleva.
»World News« (2002) by Claude Closky.
»New York – Las Vegas«, 2007, by Cory Arcangel, instructs viewers on the easiest way to leave Manhattan behind and spend a weekend in Las Vegas. Using Google maps, he describes the fastest route from the Bowery to the nearest Vegas casino.
»Thinking Machine 4«, 2004 explores the invisible, elusive nature of thought. It is an artificial intelligence program, ready to play chess with the viewer. If the viewer confronts the program, the computer’s thought process is sketched on screen as it plays. A map is created from the traces of literally thousands of possible futures as the program tries to decide its best move. Those traces become a key to the invisible lines of force in the game as well as a window into the spirit of a thinking machine. By Martin Wattenberg and Marek Walczak.
Two of “13 captured telephone conversations – all one minute long” (machine embroideries) and
“Ground Plan” – the world as an architectural plan by Louisa Bufardeci.
»New York City Public Schools Connected in Numerical Order« (The Bronx) by Neil Freeman.
»The World Justified« (A map of the World represented in a graphic style and arranged like text)
In »Seoul/Killing Time« the city of Seoul as simulated in a videogame. The video killing time records one desertion match.
»Pilha« is a writing system that relates piles of identical objects to the letters of the Latin alphabet. All three projects by Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain.
»Le monde érotique« is Pierre Joseph’s attempt at recreating a map of the World from memory.
»Exposition Consortium« is a selfportrait showing a tomogram of Pierre Joseph’s brain.
Font made out of matches and match boxes.
Interwoven maps of Zimbabwe. Images from the opening of Dan Halter’s show Take Me To Your Leader.
Paper Record Player. To play the record the handle needs to be turned in a clockwise direction at a steady 331/3 rpm. The paper cone then acts as a pick up and amplifies the sound enough to make it audible.
FM Radio Map. This map plots the location of FM commercial and pirate radio stations within London. The poster works in its own right as a piece of information design, but when connected to the modified radio it becomes part of the interface. Placing a metal contact onto each point enables us to listen to the sound broadcast live from that location. By Simon Elvins.