GreatWritersFranzKafka

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 8 January 2012

The Beauty of Maps (BBC Four)

Posted on 00:33 by Unknown












Documentary series charting the visual appeal and historical meaning of maps.

Medieval Maps - Mapping the Medieval Mind
Episode 1 of 4

The Hereford Mappa Mundi is the largest intact Medieval wall map in the world and its ambition is breathtaking - to picture all of human knowledge in a single image. The work of a team of artists, the world it portrays is overflowing with life, featuring Classical and Biblical history, contemporary buildings and events, animals and plants from across the globe, and the infamous 'monstrous races' which were believed to inhabit the remotest corners of the Earth.




The Mappa Mundi, meaning 'cloth of the world', has spent most of its long life at Hereford Cathedral, rarely emerging from behind its glass case. The programme represents a rare opportunity to get close to the map and explore its detail, giving a unique insight into the Medieval mind. This is also the first programme to show the map in its original glory, revealing the results of a remarkable year-long project by the Folio Society to restore it using the latest digital technology.

The map has a chequered history. Since its glory days in the 1300s it has languished forgotten in storerooms, been dismissed as a curious 'monstrosity', and controversially almost sold. Only in the last 20 years have scholars and artists realised its true depth and meaning, with the map exerting an extraordinary power over those who come into contact with it. The programme meets some of these individuals, from scholars and map lovers to Turner Prize-winning artist Grayson Perry, whose own work, the Map of Nowhere, is inspired by the Mappa Mundi.

City Maps - Order out of Chaos
Episode 2 of 4


The British Library is home to a staggering 4.5 million maps, most of which remain hidden away in its colossal basement, and the programme delves behind the scenes to explore some amazing treasures in more detail. This is the story of three maps, three 'visions' of London over three centuries; visions of beauty that celebrate but also distort the truth. It's the story of how urban maps try to impose order on chaos.

On Sunday 2 September 1660, the Great Fire of London began reducing most of the city to ashes, and among the huge losses were many maps of the city itself. The Morgan Map of 1682 was the first to show the whole of the City of London after the fire. Consisting of sixteen separate sheets, measuring eight feet by five feet, it took six years to complete. Morgan's beautiful map symbolised the hoped-for ideal city.

In 1746 John Rocque produced what was at the time the most detailed map ever made of London. Like Morgan's, Rocque's map is all neo-Classical beauty and clinical precision, but the London it represented had become the opposite. In engravings of the time, such as Night, the artist William Hogarth shows a city boiling with vice and corruption. Stephen Walter's contemporary image, The Island, plays with notions of cartographic order and respectability. His extraordinary London map looks at first glance to be just as precise and ordered as his hero Rocque's but, looking closer, it includes 21st-century markings, such as 'favourite kebab vans' and sites of 'personal heartbreak'.



Atlas Maps - Thinking Big
Episode 3 of 4


The Dutch Golden Age saw map-making reach a fever pitch of creative and commercial ambition. This was the era of the first ever atlases - elaborate, lavish and beautiful. This was the great age of discovery and marked an unprecedented opportunity for mapmakers, who sought to record and categorise the newly acquired knowledge of the world. Rising above the many mapmakers in this period was Gerard Mercator, inventor of the Mercator projection, who changed mapmaking forever when he published his collection of world maps in 1598 and coined the term 'atlas'.

The programme looks at some of the largest and most elaborate maps ever produced, from the vast maps on the floor of the Royal Palace in Amsterdam, to the 24-volume atlas covering just the Netherlands, to the largest atlas in the world, The Klencke Atlas. It was made for Charles II to mark his restoration in 1660. But whilst being one of the British Library's most important items, it is also one of its most fragile, so hardly ever opened. This is a unique opportunity to see inside this enormous and lavish work, and see the world through the eyes of a king.




Cartoon Maps - Politics and Satire
Episode 4 of 4



The series concludes by delving into the world of satirical maps. How did maps take on a new form, not as geographical tools, but as devices for humour, satire or storytelling?

Graphic artist Fred Rose perfectly captured the public mood in 1880 with his general election maps featuring Gladstone and Disraeli, using the maps to comment upon crucial election issues still familiar to us today. Technology was on the satirist's side, with the advent of high-speed printing allowing for larger runs at lower cost. In 1877, when Rose produced his Serio Comic Map of Europe at War, maps began to take on a new direction and form, reflecting a changing world.

Rose's map exploited these possibilities to the full using a combination of creatures and human figures to represent each European nation. The personification of Russia as a grotesque-looking octopus, extending its tentacles around the surrounding nations, perfectly symbolised the threat the country posed to its neighbours.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • "A tiger - in Africa?" - Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983): The First Zulu War. Natal 1879 (not Glasgow)
    Democracy and humanitarianism have always been tarde marks of the British Army and have stamped its triumph throughout history, in the furth...
  • California Through the Lens of Hollywood by Dana Polan
    From the cartoons that I watched on television in my East Coast childhood, I remember what was for me a primary image of California. Several...
  • Most Evil Women in History: Satan's Daughter Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche
    Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, (born July 10, 1846, Röcken, near Lützen, Prussia [Germany]—died Nov. 8, 1935, Weimar, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach [G...
  • The Two versions of the Imaginary - Maurice Blanchot, The Space of Literature
    But what is the image? When there is nothing, the image finds in this nothing its necessary condition, but there it disappears. The image ne...
  • Poesia e Composição - A Inspiração e o Trabalho de Arte, João Cabral de Melo Neto (Versão Integral)
    (Conferência pronunciada na Biblioteca de São Paulo, em 13.11.52,no curso de Poética) A composição que para uns é o alto de aprisionar a poe...
  • The Mother of All Bubbles - Gordon Gekko - Wall Street: Money never sleeps
    You wanna know what the mother of all bubbles was? Us. The human race. Scientists call it the Cambrian Explosion, from the Cambrian fauna.It...
  • The God’s Script by Jorge Luis Borges
    The prison is deep and of stone; its form, that of a nearly perfect hemisphere, though the floor (also of stone) is somewhat less than a gre...
  • Alien and the Monstrous-Feminine by Barbara Creed
    The science fiction horror film Alien (1979) is a complex representation of the monstrous-feminine in terms of the maternal figure as perce...
  • The Genius of Josef Lada
    The hugely popular illustrator, cartoonist, painter, and novelist, as well as a successful caricaturist and stage designer, Josef Lada was b...
  • Hegelianism For Dummies
    No doubt we are intelligent. But far from changing the face of the world, on stage we keep producing rabbits from our brain, and snow-white ...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (133)
    • ►  August (6)
    • ►  July (11)
    • ►  June (22)
    • ►  May (23)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (17)
    • ►  February (19)
    • ►  January (14)
  • ▼  2012 (269)
    • ►  December (20)
    • ►  November (15)
    • ►  October (12)
    • ►  September (7)
    • ►  August (22)
    • ►  July (21)
    • ►  June (27)
    • ►  May (27)
    • ►  April (22)
    • ►  March (24)
    • ►  February (31)
    • ▼  January (41)
      • The wolves defended against the lambs - Verteidigu...
      • America in Pictures: The Story of Life Magazine (B...
      • The Hunt for Higgs A Horizon Special (BBC Horizon...
      • Princess Lizard - Minima Moralia - Theodor W. Adorno
      • Princesa Lagartixa - Minima Moralia - Theodor W. ...
      • L'Inutile Beauté - Minima Moralia - Theodor W. Ado...
      • L'Inutile Beauté - Minima Moralia - Theodor W. Adorno
      • "You can't believe everything you see" - Form Is C...
      • The World’s Biggest Bomb
      • “I would believe only in a god that knows how to d...
      • Sound and Industry: Kraftwerk and the Düsseldorf s...
      • Germany and the Avant-Garde: The early German rock...
      • And Now for Something Completely Different: German...
      • Modernity - An Incomplete Project - Jürgen Habermas
      • Having-Your-Heart-in-the-Right-Place-Is-Not-Making...
      • Bette Davis Eyes
      • Oligart. The Great Russian Art Boom with Marcel Th...
      • The Physics of Heaven: History, Science, and Techn...
      • Entretien avec Paul Virilio: En attendant la bombe...
      • Paul Virilio: Denker der Geschwindigkeit
      • Wie geht´s weiter? (How Does the Story End?)
      • Mercators geheime Mission: Die erste Europakarte
      • Юдифь и Олоферн
      • Олег Дозорцев (Oleg Dozortsev) Russian's Hieronymu...
      • The Art of Russia with Andrew Graham-Dixon (BBC Four)
      • Editorial - Stadtarchitektur oder Stadt der Mauern...
      • Das brasilianische Projekt - Anthropophagisches Ma...
      • Das brasilianische Projekt - Das Anthropophagische...
      • Yukio Mishima (三島由紀夫): a Kamikaze for Beauty - The...
      • The Mask of Death of Modernism - Mark Vallen on Ro...
      • The Beauty of Maps (BBC Four)
      • Cultural Stereotypes in the maps by Yanko Tsvetkov...
      • Ein Gespräch mit Joseph Beuys (1985)
      • Sol Lewitt - Paragraphs on Conceptual Art (1967 an...
      • Mel Bochner: a Book Review on Lucy Lippard's class...
      • Longue, mince, en grand deuil, douleur majestueuse...
      • Prof. Thomas Childers's "Wings Of Morning": The St...
      • Visions of Space - Robert Hughes
      • Play it again, Bill - Ufos over Nuremberg or the L...
      • Fly with Me!
      • On Andrew Holden’s "Cyberpunk Educator"
  • ►  2011 (98)
    • ►  December (26)
    • ►  November (55)
    • ►  October (17)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile