I like big maps, and I cannot lie, and small ones too, and after my
little online ramble with Cab Calloway around 1930s Harlem in the last post, I’ve
been finding various fascinating and in some cases utterly inscrutable
maps. Generally I like them better the
more inscrutable they are.
Since New Orleans is on everybody’s mind right now, and although I know this isn't WHY New Orleans is on everybody's mind right now, I
was nevertheless knocked out by the beautiful simplicity of this antique map of the French Quarter:
As an Englishman, of course, the grid is essentially
unfamiliar to my experience of walking in cities, or was till I moved to the
States, but I do think if you’re going to have a grid it should be as grid-like
as possible.
The one above – quite grid-free - is from Popular Map Reading by E.D Laborde, published in 1928, a kind of textbook, and the
image is part of a revision test to see how much you’ve learned about map reading. Admittedly it’s not much of a walking map,
but as a visual object I think it sings.
You could also, quite easily, do a walk inspired by or conforming to it.
And now this one:
Naturally, the familiar London Tube map by Harry Beck is much used and abused,
subverted and appropriated in all kinds of ways, but this seems more fun than
many. The notion that Miami is just a few stops away from Jerusalem would no
doubt appear to a lot of people, maybe even William Blake.
That
image actually appears in Wikipedia as an illustration to the entry on
Psychogeography, and sure I get the general idea of the map but its deeper
meaning remains mysterious, which is no doubt the intention. Maps mean different things to different people, and some are designed to be meaningless to those not in the know.
And OK,
if we’re going the Psychogeography route, above is Guy Debord’s map of The
Naked City – Paris, cut up, exploded and messed with. Good luck finding your way with this one,
though that is no doubt the “whole point.”
Debord's Naked City map is from 1957. The American TV series Naked City ran from 1958 to 1963. Were the creators of these two things aware of each other? I do hope so.
Debord's Naked City map is from 1957. The American TV series Naked City ran from 1958 to 1963. Were the creators of these two things aware of each other? I do hope so.
And perhaps both parties were aware of Weegee’s book also titled Naked
City, published in 1945.
And,
since I style myself as the Hollywood
Walker I should obviously point out that Weegee also published a book, in 1955, titled Naked Hollywood. Sometimes it seems like all the great titles
have already been used.
And life being as it is, I now discover that a website title http://weegeeweegeeweegee.net has made
a map of Weegee’s New York – “A map of
locations in New York City where Weegee worked, made photographs, lived and
loved... organized geographically... downtown to uptown to the outer boroughs
and ending at Coney Island... and/or Jersey City... (An experiment and work in
progress.)” as they say.
You need to go to the website to be able to click on it, but I still like it as an image in itself:
You need to go to the website to be able to click on it, but I still like it as an image in itself: