“This work uses real statistics on Austria to create an image of Austria,” Babak Fakhamzadeh here on his website about this work, ‘Numbers’, that he created for Paraflows in Vienna, demonstrating a concept called ‘un-space’:
“Statistics, representing a real-life environment are, by their very nature, an un-space, as they only exist on paper. For example, the statistic that 1% of Austrians are members of voluntary environmental organizations is nothing but a number and doesn’t say anything about each individual living in Austria, except in general terms, on an abstract level.”
“However, these numbers, these statistics, create a representation of a physical space, Austria, therefore pretending that statistics can actually be representative for a real life construct.”
To take ‘un-space’ up on its own premise, let’s just imagine an Austria in which, quite literally…
• All of the 4,9% Austrians who are unemployed live close to the Slovakian border, not far from Bratislava. For every 1.000 Austrians, a ghostly half-priest stalks an area enclaved in between this Arbeitslosenland and Slovakia.
• A small area just south of Unemployed Country houses the 2,2% of Austrians who are actually Serbians.
• In the south of the country, probably in a gated community and with screwed to the front of their houses the most expensive alarm installations their plundered coffers could afford, live the 3,1% of Austrians who’ve been the victim of a property crime – or theft, as they called it in the olden days.
• Rarther inconveniently located in Carinthia and Styria, some of the most vertically-challenging parts of the country, are the 9,1% who love their Apfelstrudel too much. Think of all those ample Austrians having tho heave themselves over hill and dale to get to the nearest shop. Fortunately, the Alp meadows are stocked with purple cows, made completely out of chocolate.
• The half percent of Austrians using amphetamines are tucked away near Bregenz, close to the Swiss border, next to that other undesirable element, the 7% “not proud of their nationality”, tucked away in Tyrol - which is ironic, since Tyroleans are usually a bit more nationalistic than the average Austrian (or so I’ve been told by an Austrian).
• Cannabis users (3%), Muslims (4,7%) and volunteers (3%) each occupy a slice of Austria’s north, with illiterates (2%) holding on to the core of the Heimat. Just for fun,
I’m trying to picture a border crossing between each of these entities inside ‘un-Austria’: The sternly disapproving gaze of pious, bearded customs officers in skullcaps and halal Lederhosen, directed at their giggling slacker colleagues in the nearby booth, actually encourages their incontrollable bouts of laughter. The volunteer side of the border crossing sits unmanned, allowing thousands to cross unchecked, while the illiterate officers, frustrated at not being able to find anything wrong with any of those passports, have to wave all of them through.

Congratulations and thank you for this great website.
A bit of criticism: This map today, as some others before, would look much crisper (and load faster) is it had been created in .GIF or .PNG format, with its (originall) vast single-color areas.
(No, converting a badly JPG-damaged image to .GIF or .PNG doesn’t do the trick: it must be re-exported.)
Comment by António Martins-Tuválkin — October 18, 2007 @ 11:22 am
’strange maps’. – Eine Blog-Empfehlung
Vorstellung eines meiner LieblingsBlogs. Es geht um Karten, um Visualisierungen. (Wen’s interessiert. Ich liebe Karten.)
Der Blog heißt ‘Strange Maps’.
Eine Empfehlung für Liebhaber.
…
Trackback by kellerabteil — October 18, 2007 @ 4:52 pm
This concept really is a fatuous and meaningless pile of gobbledygook…what can you really do with this stuff? Stats are hard enough to interpret as it is. This approach helps that not one iota..
Unspace? Pah! Unbelieveable
Comment by tindle — October 18, 2007 @ 5:49 pm
I’d love to see un-maps of other un-countries. An un-America or un-UK, for example, could be interesting.
Comment by Darrel Jones — October 18, 2007 @ 6:50 pm
I have issues with this map, too. Take the obesity stat, for example. It’s the largest portion of the un-Austria map. Yet it represents only 9% of the population. But what does it mean? That fat people aren’t Austrians? That they represent large percentage … of what, exactly? It’s a mess that says nothing about anything.
Comment by El Santo — October 18, 2007 @ 7:34 pm
Did they just get random statistics that add up to 100%?
A lot of these categories should overlap: unemployed people can also be obese or drug-users just as members of voluntary organisation can also be obese and priests.
This makes the whole thing quite meaningless.
Comment by Xavier — October 19, 2007 @ 2:58 am
Is there any standard to the colors? I notice all the religions are in gray, fore example…
Comment by Lurker — October 19, 2007 @ 3:24 am
Yeah, this is pretty lame…
Comment by Dude — October 19, 2007 @ 5:16 pm
But is it art?
Comment by lordhutton — October 20, 2007 @ 5:15 pm
Wow, nice post. Also, interesting facts, and the imaginations are better :-P
Just two technical points: GIF/PNG (or SVG) would’ve been better than JPEG, and the colors – instead of 6 shades of green and some brown/grey, 4 distinct coors should’ve been chosen – or does this reflect on the percentage of austria being wood, stone/ungrown mountain and built-up area :-P
Comment by Tijmen Stam / IIVQ — October 22, 2007 @ 12:35 am
FYI…the obese Austrians are the border between Tirol and Salzburgerland (Province of Salzburg), not Styria and Carinthia.
Still very mountainous terrain!
Comment by Chuck — November 3, 2007 @ 12:23 am
“…the 7% “not proud of their nationality”, tucked away in Tyrol – which is ironic, since Tyroleans are usually a bit more nationalistic than the average Austrian (or so I’ve been told by an Austrian)”
Not quite. The description’s pointer is to Vorarlberg, which is not Tyrol.
This may be of some significance, as a significant number of Vorarlbergians are not only not proud to be Austrians, but also proud not to be Tyroleans. :-)
The map, by the way, is a complete load of … :-)
Comment by Vorarlberger — November 3, 2007 @ 7:26 pm
thanks
Comment by hero — October 15, 2008 @ 4:56 pm
thank you
Comment by Tony — May 4, 2009 @ 3:08 am
thanks for this map..
good
luck
Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 8:38 am
merci
Comment by aspicco . — May 17, 2009 @ 6:23 am
Vielen Dank
Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 4:48 am
Muchas gracias
Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:17 am