Strange Maps

November 2, 2007

198 - The Ideal City (Anno 1951)

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @

c101.jpg

Mid-20th century British illustrator Ronald Lampitt had a predilection for maps. It probably was no coincidence that he got to draw, in the Illustrated Magazine of 17 February 1951, the proposal of John Sleigh Pudney for an ideal city.

Pudney (1909-1977) was a prolific British journalist and writer (despite leaving school at 16), remembered mainly (if at all) for his short stories, his wartime poem For Johnny (1941) and his BAFTA-winning documentary ‘Elizabeth is Queen’ (1953). In the aforementioned article, he proposes his vision:

“In this age of planning it is surely time that some innocent traditionalist thrust his way forward to offer mankind the ideal city. Whose ideal? goes up the snarl from the idealists. Ideal for what? chorus the realists. Ideal against whom? demand the tacticians. Why a city? moan the simple-lifers. Allow me for a moment to toy with dreams, taking a holiday from the magic of the materialists. The ideal city which I shall venture to plan must be controversial: for it is myself of whom I am thinking rather than of humanity in general. I have the vice, before my ink is dry, of all planners. I have a sneaking notion already that what is good for me must be good for the rest of mankind.”

That nameless city under Lampitts brushstrokes becomes a spacious, undulating seaside paradise of a place, populated with monuments that look vaguely familiar. Which is because they are; they’re architectural icons from all over the world – the western world, that is. And yet, this ideal city looks suspiciously sterile: no rubbish tips, no shantytowns, no shopping malls, no advertising… Here follows a list of buildings referenced at the bottom of the map.

1. Modern Airfield
2. Mount Holmen Koll, Oslo
3. Acropolis, Athens
4. Helsinki Hospitals, Clinics
5. Old Town and Castle, Antibes, France
6. White Wooden Houses of Carolina
7. Governmental Palace, Prague
8. Fitzwilliam Square, Dublin
9.Sacré Coeur, Paris
10. King’s College, Cambridge
11. Georgian Houses of Bath
12. Edinburgh Castle
13. Maritime Quarter, NY
14. Municipal Buildings
15. Modern Houses, Finland
16. Business Section, NY
17. Street of Steps, Valetta
18. Tivoli Gardens, Copenhagen
19. Elevated Railway, NY
20. Broadway, NY
21. Palazzo Vecchio, Florence
22. Moscow Underground
23. Art Gallery
24. St Paul’s Cathedral, London
25. La Scala, Milan
26. Piazza della Signoria, Florence
27. Paris Boulevards
28. Canals of Venice
29. Library
30. Cultural Centre
31. Stockholm Waterways
32. Gothenburg Concert Hall
33. St Stephen’s, Vienna
34. Museum

The map was found here, in the intriguingly idiosyncratic graphic collection at fulltable.com. Pudney’s article is here.

197 - The Colourful Side of the Moon

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @

moonmap.jpg

I have to agree with Brandon Keim, who reviewed this map for Wired Magazine (here): it most definitely is one of “the coolest planetary maps ever”.

This map is of the dark side of the moon, which here looks more like a Jackson Pollock action painting, its riotous colours corresponding to geological materials and phenomena. Many of the colour spots are circular in nature, reflecting the large number of meteorites that have impacted on the lunar surface, unprotected by an atmosphere, over many, many centuries.

The map is one of a series produced by NASA and the US Geological Survey between 1971 and 1998. “If you’re on a public or work computer that’s set to a generic desktop background, download some and spread the wonder,” Keim suggests. Hear, hear!

This map was suggested by Max Kahn. The original article (cf. sup.) also contains links to further maps of the Moon, Mercury, Mars, Venus and three moons of Jupiter (Io, Ganymede and Callisto).

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