natalie found it

Play. Ask questions. Tell stories.
26/f/NY currently in advertising

a delicious blend of findings & pass alongs sprinkled with personal bits.

to view anything at full size, mouse over the area below the post and click permalink.

follow:
twitter.com/natalieykim
say hi:
nataliefoundit@gmail.com
read:
the365plan.blogspot.com
http://9perweek.tumblr.com/
Here & There by Jack Schulze, James King and Campbell Orme, part of MoMA’s Talk To Me exhibit.
“In this horizonless perspective, the streets of New York suddenly fold upward, creating a double view of the city. BERG’s Here & There map of Manhattan is inspired by gaming technology, satellites, and, the designers say, the idea that “the ability to be in a city and to see through it is a superpower, and it’s how maps should work.” The maps, created using sophisticated modeling software, start in the foreground with a three-dimensional image of buildings that graphically bends as the buildings extend into the distance, thus displaying remote areas of the city in plan view. This puts the viewer in two places at once, above and in the city, able to visualize urban space as a continuous medium.”Here & There by Jack Schulze, James King and Campbell Orme, part of MoMA’s Talk To Me exhibit.
“In this horizonless perspective, the streets of New York suddenly fold upward, creating a double view of the city. BERG’s Here & There map of Manhattan is inspired by gaming technology, satellites, and, the designers say, the idea that “the ability to be in a city and to see through it is a superpower, and it’s how maps should work.” The maps, created using sophisticated modeling software, start in the foreground with a three-dimensional image of buildings that graphically bends as the buildings extend into the distance, thus displaying remote areas of the city in plan view. This puts the viewer in two places at once, above and in the city, able to visualize urban space as a continuous medium.”

Here & There by Jack Schulze, James King and Campbell Orme, part of MoMA’s Talk To Me exhibit.

In this horizonless perspective, the streets of New York suddenly fold upward, creating a double view of the city. BERG’s Here & There map of Manhattan is inspired by gaming technology, satellites, and, the designers say, the idea that “the ability to be in a city and to see through it is a superpower, and it’s how maps should work.” The maps, created using sophisticated modeling software, start in the foreground with a three-dimensional image of buildings that graphically bends as the buildings extend into the distance, thus displaying remote areas of the city in plan view. This puts the viewer in two places at once, above and in the city, able to visualize urban space as a continuous medium.”

Comments (View)
blog comments powered by Disqus