Poems About Places

Ever since Google published their map interface, people around the web have been using it to track all sorts of phenomena. There even seems to be a word for it — geotag: the process of adding geographical identification metadata to various media such as photographs, video, and websites (here’s the wikipedia entry). And there’s a blog called Google Maps Mania that attempts to keep track of them.
One such place is Poetry Atlas, which is “mapping the world with Poetry.” They believe “that everywhere has had a poem written about it at some time or other. Our aim is to augment reality by adding a poetic layer to every place.” On their map, I stumbled on this one:

Happiness
Carl Sandburg

I asked the professors who teach the meaning of life to tell me what is happiness.
And I went to famous executives who boss the work of thousands of men.
They all shook their heads and gave me a smile as though I was trying to fool with them
And then one Sunday afternoon I wandered out along the Desplaines river
And I saw a crowd of Hungarians under the trees with their women and children and a keg of beer and an accordion.

Poetry Atlas

Map Cuts

Cathy sent me a link to a post about Karen O’Leary’s Map Cuts. They are hand cut, and Karen says this on her Etsy shop:

If you’re interested in a certain city, please send me an email and allow a few months for me to complete it. please note, each map takes quite a bit of time. Custom pieces will be hand-cut in the order that payment is received.

Map Cuts by Karen O’Leary

Navigating

Horton Family MapsWhen we returned home from Santa Fe, there was a comment on one of my recent posts about maps that said “maps are almost obsolete with GPS and all…” and that made me think about our experience navigating and learning the layout of Santa Fe.
Before we left, I got a AAA map, but it required a magnifying glass to read the street names so it proved useless. From the Santa Fe tourism board, I had several sketchy maps that it turns out didn’t extend to the little casita (small short term rental in the back of someone’s house) we’d booked for the week. I printed a handful of maps + directions from Google, giving the path from the casita to various restaurants and tourist sites (these were the most useful). And I also brought our Garmen GPS system that plugs into the cigarette lighter of my car.
I bought the Garmen several years ago because I have no sense of direction and am more apt to get lost than make my way directly to wherever I’m going. I give it a mixed review — on the plus side, I’ve always gotten where I need to go. On the negative, it can take 10 minutes to get a satellite signal at night or if it’s rainy or cloudy and worst of all, it invariably picks the dumbest route ever. Once, in San Francisco, it took me through Chinatown then the busy shopping district in Union Square, and finally asked me to make a left hand turn with a lot of traffic and no light. There had to have been a better way!
We used the Garmen the first day or 2, all the while discussing how we might learn the layout of the neighborhood where we were staying. There were lots of streets with similar names, streets that dead-ended and several more going only one way. My husband tried to identify & remember landmarks, I tried memorizing the street names.
Then someone we met suggested the Horton Family Maps. It’s a book of street maps of the area, and almost instantly I was able to get a big picture of the town and figure out the distance between places (the Garmen will tell me how many minutes to get somewhere, but it’s awkward to figure out how many miles). We still used the Garmen, but with the book we were able to figure out alternate routes to the inefficient ones the Garmen suggested. (The map guide is family owned and only covers Santa Fe, Taos, Los Alamos area. There’s a nice article about them here.)
I must admit that I found it fascinating watching us attempt to learn to navigate a new place! What do you like to use to learn how to get around a new town?

Another Artist Using Maps: Susan Stockwell

Quilt made from mapsUK-based paper artist Susan Stockwell does a lot of work with maps and map images. One I particularly liked is her Imperial Quilt — a paper quilt, hand stitched in a traditional American quilt pattern, and using maps as the material.
There is so much to see on her website! Clothing made of maps (check out this article) and other papers, paper sculpture as well as drawings. I whiled away a nice hour looking and reading the articles….

Soft-Maps

soft map quiltSoft-Maps are made-to-order quilted maps of neighborhoods and parks made by Haptic Lab. It’s an awful lot of sewing for the streets and such but they are so tactile looking that I want to reach through my screen and touch them. I must also be in an monochrome mood, because I especially like the one-color schemes — to get a better idea of what they look like, you can see the quilter, Emily Fisher, in front of a large quilt here.