Strava World Heatmap

app/website

http://labs.strava.com/heatmap

User data from over 170 million bike rides and runs from 2015 is overlayed on a tiled map using data from Mapbox and Open Streetmaps. Toggling between bike rides, runs, and both, reveals the ways in which Strava users traverse roads, paths, and in between. While the data is compiled by computer engineers, it is created by the millions of users who attached GPS devices to their bodies or bikes in an attempt to measure their speed, distance, heart-rate, energy output, etc.

Sam McFaul – Oral Mapping

Ac Ko Mok Ki – Peter Fidler

Stz’uminus – oral story map

http://www.firstvoices.com/en/Hlgaagilda-Xaayda-Kil/stories
(the exact story I presented is not located on this website as it was obtained first hand and the file is not able to be posted – alternatively other Haida – Hlg̱aagilda X̱aayda Kil – stories are provided above)

https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?ll=48.99545253486705%2C-123.7910270736084&spn=0.120051%2C0.207195&dg=feature&msa=0&mid=1E_H17pirVICYyT2wMpojCU8O0H8&z=13

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“Colonizers produce knowledge of a territory within a specific framework that allows them to understand and ‘know’ place on their own terms. The ‘imaginary geography’ justifies possession over space by privileging the colonizer’s representations of territory.”
– Matthew Dyce

“Modernity constructs it’s other as a way of  privileging itself”
– Edward Said

“Indigenous place names are not simply geographic identifiers; they are houses for layers of information, including cultural and historical knowledge, environmental conditions, availability of resources, and Aboriginal identity”
– Müller-Wille, 1989; Thorton, 1997; Cruikshank, 1990

Sam McFaul

9-eyes See All?

Image credit: http://9-eyes.com/

Quotes from Susan Sontag, On Photography, 1977:

“Strictly speaking, one never understands anything from a photograph….Today everything exists to end in a photograph.”

“The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people’s reality, and eventually in one’s own.”

“Needing to have reality confirmed, and experience enhanced by photographs is an aesthetic consumerism to which everyone is now addicted. ”

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9 –Eyes is a project by Canadian Artist Jon Rafman. Begun in 2009 and continuing to the present, this series is a sort of street photography taken from within mapspace. Rafman takes screenshots from the ever-evolving, distorted, and stitched web of Google Street View panoramas and posts them to this blog: 9-eyes.com. The artist, rather than strolling physical streets, drifts through cyber geospace and retroactively finds the ‘decisive moment’ described by Cartier-Bresson in poetic, violent, turbulent, pastoral, comical and ultimately ambiguous scenes. I would like to use 9-Eyes to dismantle Google Street View’s supposed neutrality.

Maps have tended to focus on geographic space and index human artifacts– our roads, houses, tweets, traffic patterns etc—as opposed to humans ourselves. Google Street View is both laudable and problematic for the inclusion of people within its archives. As some of Rafman’s images begin to show, the subjects captured are of a certain demographic. This is because, the street view cars equipped with (originally 9) but now 15 cameras only venture out in the brightest (shadowless) hours of the day, meaning most white collar workers are not occupying the street. Instead, the privacy of prostitutes, criminals, the elderly, and children to name a few, is arguably unevenly violated. While the algorithm blurs faces and license plates, it is far from perfect, and people are often identifiable. On the other hand, the repository of images of people could be mobilised for good, to illustrate, argue or prove.

However, this blurring of identity mirrors and exacerbates our lack of empathetic recognition of fellow humans. Rafman’s images are mined from countries around the globe, and divorced from their immediate context we struggle to understand the circumstances of each image and the identity of the people within in. I read this as a comment on the digital proximity yet estrangement with others we face on social media today.  The presentation format of a never-ending blogroll also contributes to this blur, as images meld together in front of the viewer, without reference.

The endlessness of Rafman’s blogroll critiques another facet of mapmaking and our online culture today: that we are faced with overwhelming amounts of data, information, and even maps available on and through the internet. This also points to another bias in Google’s Street Views. They hide their implicit authorship of the maps, behind the sheer amount of their data. In their totalizing mission, the data takes on a life of its own, they can no longer be seen responsible for the immense amount of it. Instead, it falls on the viewers to find and report any violations, or aberrations in the maps.

Rafman performs a sort of archeology of this data archive. He sifts through this constantly updating mapscape and preserves certain views, recontextualizes, or even maps them. Though originally taken by a computer-driven camera program, digitally stitched together and distorted, Rafman adds a human dimension by finding, and selecting these pictures. While certainly problematic, this has the effect of personalizing the visual data. Rafman’s project shows us how Street View is far from neutral and brings us simultaneously closer and farther than ever from the places and people represented on the map as we look on in amusement, horror, bewilderment and laughter.

LINKS:

http://9-eyes.com/

https://www.google.com/streetview/understand/

Solstice: Overlaying Realities and Experiences

by: T.Rolls, C.Winters, & S.Marcondes
Solstice, 2011
Public art installation with projection mapping
location 49°16’27.24”N, 123° 7’27.56”W
20’-0” x 10’-0 suspended at 15’-0” overhead from a wood canopy

Vancouver is a notoriously rainy city in the winter and on the rare sunny day; most people are stuck indoors working. Solstice was a public art installation that sought to bring the feeling of sun and warmth to the night sky for everyone to enjoy in the dreary winter months.

By collecting HD timelapse footage of bright, colourful Vancouver skies and using 3D projection mapping techniques, projected onto a custom sculpture, Solstice created a spatially augment reality for the viewer. The result was an abstract window into a brighter world. The project creates a representation of an enticing environment through a visual storytelling experience for the viewer. The physical narratives of this work are based in optics, illusion and the investigation of the>perception of reality (Hfour, 2017).

Hfour. (2017). Hexastart: A Video art installation featuring projection mapped geometric high-relief sculptures. Accessed from http://hfour.ca/portfolio-item/hexastar

Solstice. Tim Rolls. Vimeo.

Village Voices: An Audio Walking Tour of the Cathedral Area

Evie Ruddy is a digital media artist, freelance journalist and creative writer, specializing in digital story telling. “Village Voices: An Audio Walking Tour of the Cathedral Area,” while evidently a form of digital story telling, is also a cybercartographic map. Cybercartography is defined as “The organization, presentation, analysis and communication of spatially referenced information on a wide range of topics of interest and use to society in an interactive, dynamic, multimedia and multi sensory format (Taylor, N.D., p.2).”

This interactive, GPS located and triggered audio map shares personal and collective histories through a multi-media multi-sensory experience, facilitated through a smart phone audio guide application called izi.TRAVEL. This map prioritizes spatially located qualitative information over the creation of a graphic artifact. Its significance lies in its content, its utility, and its focus of performance and narrative.

When it comes to learning about our environments in all capacities this fully immersive and ’bottom-up’ method of communicating location-based information is very meaningful. It triggers emotional responses to location based information

One of the short fallings of this map is it its reliance access to smart phone technology. Only those privileged with the ability to spend 100$+/mo on a phone plan have access to the full, 1:1 audio map experience. This platform also relies heavily on the use of Google Maps imagery, appropriating the issues that come along side it.

SOAK – Mumbai in an Estuary

SOAK: Mumbai in an Estuary is series of maps by Anuradha Mathur and Dilip Da Cunha . Their digitally constructed representations of Mumbai in and estuary were originally displayed as prints in the national gallery of  New Delhi.  Their work is a response to the 2005 floods in Mumbai.  The way which they chose to record the shoreline is a critique against the type of maps made by proponents of 20th c. flood control measures like the first map I have included in the PDF.

Please take a look and take a look and try to guess the thesis of their work and I will be happy to discuss it with you later 🙂

SOAK

Listening to trees.

Chaitrali’s project made me think of what kind of objects you can play with a record player, because records are a 3D representation of sound. Here is a tree’s life mapped with sound.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lB6Sn_yC3AE

What is producing invisibility?

This Paper entitled “Their Spirits Live within Us
Aboriginal Women in Downtown Eastside Vancouver
Emerging into Visibility” by Dara Culhane demonstrates the production of invisibility of Aboriginal women in the Downtown Eastside and how those women resist this invisibility. Interesting article picked from the reading list of my GRSJ elective course.

Mapping the Lost City Of Z: A Movie Recommendation

About The Lost City of Z:
Based on author David Grann’s nonfiction bestseller, THE LOST CITY OF Z tells the incredible true story of British explorer Percy Fawcett (Charlie Hunnam), who journeys into the Amazon at the dawn of the 20th century and discovers evidence of a previously unknown, advanced civilization that may have once inhabited the region. Despite being ridiculed by the scientific establishment who regard indigenous populations as “savages,” the determined Fawcett – supported by his devoted wife (Sienna Miller), son (Tom Holland) and aide de camp (Robert Pattinson) – returns time and again to his beloved jungle in an attempt to prove his case, culminating in his mysterious disappearance in 1925. An epically-scaled tale of courage and obsession, told in Gray’s classic filmmaking style, THE LOST CITY OF Z is a stirring tribute to the exploratory spirit and those individuals driven to achieve greatness at any cost.