Strange Maps

May 25, 2008

277 – The Biggest Drawing In the World

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @ 4:42 pm

“With the help of a GPS device and DHL, I have drawn a self portrait on our planet,” writes Swedish artist Erik Nordenankar on his website for the project, appropriately named http://biggestdrawingintheworld.com. “My pen was a briefcase containing the GPS device, being sent around the world. The paths the briefcase took around the globe became the strokes of the drawing.” The resulting drawing’s dimensions are 40,076,592 by 40,009,153 meters – which are about the dimensions of the Earth’s surface, if it could be rolled out as a canvas.

Mr Nordenankar sent off his GPS-laden briefcase on March 17, 2008. He gave detailed travel instructions to DHL, which returned his package to Stockholm exactly 55 days later. Then, Mr Nordenankar plotted the spatial and temporal GPS information on a world map to obtain his portrait. “Due to the GPS drawing technique and the magnitude of the drawing, the self portrait had to be made in only one stroke. That giant stroke passed through 6 continents and 62 countries, thus becoming 110,664 km long.”

Assuming that Mr Nordenankar’s briefcase, left Stockholm to the south, its itinerary took it Denmark, up north again to Norway and then in a straight line towards the Crimea, where some expert to-ing and fro-ing formed the artist’s eye. Lines from the Ukraine to central Europa (possibly Slovakia), bending up towards St Petersburg and then south towards the Caucasus form his brow and forehead.

The nose is formed in the Middle East, the right nostril constituted in Syria, a ‘beard line’ snaking across the Mediterranean towards France, the Low Countries and environs, where Mr Nordenankar’s right ear takes shape. His jawline drops south through the Sahara, bending up towards Egypt (mouth) and the Israel/Palestine-Jordan border (philtrum). The briefcase then travelled south along the African Red Sea Coast, over Somalia, performing some strange maneuvers east of Madagascar.

The briefcase then headed north again, hovering just below the Equator, creating an atrophied hand over the Philippines, Indonesia, Australia and Papua New Guinea. The briefcase then continued along the Equator, coming into view on the left hand side of the map (forming Mr Nordenankar’s right arm), crossing America in Panama,diving south past Brazil’s easternmost point to beyond 40° South, and up again (to form some kind of strap or a suspender).

Fancifully swinging across North America, the briefcase rejoined Mr Nordenankar’s face – or rather his curly hair – over the British Isles, tracing his neck across the Iberian peninsula, North Africa’s Atlantic Coast, the African interior and then up again in a curly arc to the Nordkapp (not Europe’s northernmost point; nearby Knivskjellodden is 1,500 meters further north), finally returning to Stockholm.

Thanks to Kathryn E. Clagett for sending in this map. 

UPDATE (May 28, 2008): I always find it unfortunate when improbable stories turn out to be untrue, and this is no exception. The elaborate loopings over sea raised suspicions that the story was fabricated, but I wrote it ‘as is’, leaving the Great Online Public to draw their own conclusions. Numerous commenters have since pointed out other improbabilities. Now the artist himself has admitted that his work of art is also a work of fiction, as report the Daily Telegraph, Wired and other sources: This is fictional work. DHL did not transport the GPS at any time, reads a message at the bottom of Mr Nordenankar’s webpage. The Telegraph adds that the clarification was added at the prompting of DHL, who had allowed the artist to film in one of their warehouses on the understanding that the school project would stay ‘indoors’.

(Thanks to Andy for providing a link to the story in Wired)


48 Comments »

  1. According to the video on his website, the briefcase went North first.

    Comment by Dave, The Void On Fire — May 25, 2008 @ 5:03 pm

  2. To me it seems just a viral marketing campaign perhaps very far from reality. I think that most of the drawing was done for sure on a desktop computer perhaps in Google Earth. I do not believe 747 DHL cargo planes went looping just for the same result. I more a matter of people think that it is feasible that doing it for real.

    Comment by Amio Cajander — May 25, 2008 @ 5:28 pm

  3. Hoax!

    Comment by Kim Hartveld — May 25, 2008 @ 5:33 pm

  4. Note that the left edge’s entry point and the right edge’s exit don’t match. On a globe they would.

    Comment by Allen Varney — May 25, 2008 @ 5:43 pm

  5. I don’t believe the drawing shown was genuinely generated by the GPS. If you watch the video, they show the briefcase supposedly on boats and on the land. If this was genuinely created by GPS there would be a lot more noise around the airport cities where air traffic control would have prevented the plane from going in exactly the right directions. Also, the briefcase would not have been able to travel on a commercial flight with other packages if it was doing loop the loops in the arctic.

    Comment by Kimberly — May 25, 2008 @ 5:52 pm

  6. [...] Biggest Drawing in the World — The GPS Generated Self Portrait [via] [...]

    Pingback by anthro.pophago.us snippets of media, anthropology, design, culture and politics. — May 25, 2008 @ 5:52 pm

  7. Yeah, there’s no way that’s legit.

    Comment by Nik — May 25, 2008 @ 5:56 pm

  8. I smell a hoax.

    Comment by Bo — May 25, 2008 @ 6:08 pm

  9. @4 – the edges aren’t at the same parallel either, the east edge ends at 166W, the western edge at 180. However, the map doesn’t match reality either, for example, Singapore is south of the equator. Uelen (the farthest east point of Russia) is actually at 169W, but this has it at 176W. (Each line on the map, by the way, is 2 degrees) Even taking into account that the left and right edges do overlap by 14 degrees (or seven lines) you are correct they don’t match, on the eastern edge, it crosses 180 at just under 2N (or the first line), on the western edge, it crosses 180 (the edge of the map) at just over 4N (the second line)

    Comment by David — May 25, 2008 @ 6:09 pm

  10. Definitely a hoax.

    Why would any air freighter perform that bizarre double loop east of Madagascar? There’s nothing there to land on. The path indicated runs SSE from about Mogadishu in Somalia to an empty area of ocean about 1,000 km E of northern Madagascar, bends E for another 1,500 km E to nowhere, turns around and flies back W 2,000 km, to empty ocean just E of Madagascar (but well W of Mauritius or Reunion), then another 1,500 km S to to nowhere, then back N 3,500 km, then 7,000 km (!) E to Sumatra. That’s 15,000 km over water. The apparent destination appears to be Palembang, a provincial capital in Sumatra, and not a likely hub for intercontinental air freight runs.

    Also, some of the latitude and longitude marks on the map are bogus. The indicated equator is about 400 km N of the real equator; the indicated 40S latitude is about 500 km N. (The tip of Africa is at 35S, not 40S as indicated.) The 80N latitude is wrong: it should bisect Ellesmere Island and clip Spitzbergen. The 120E meridian is at 125E (the wrong side of Taiwan!).

    Some of the sections of the track would seem a lot more likely if shifted E or W. Perhaps Mr. Nordenankar actually sent his GPS package, but mistranscribed the coordinates.

    Comment by Rich Rostrom — May 25, 2008 @ 6:50 pm

  11. Yeah, this is completely made up. DHL isn’t in the business of transporting objects on a particular route, nor is any carrier. Typically a hub and spoke system is used so that packages can be quickly sorted at central facilities.

    you’d have to use a private plane to do something like this, and even then you’d wind up with unavoidable detours due to weather, airspace restrictions, refueling/maintenance needs, etc.

    Comment by Nathaniel — May 25, 2008 @ 7:10 pm

  12. and he does not show us the actual GPS unit. He shows the case the the batteries but not the unit itself with the tracking on it. Hardly believable.

    Comment by youknowit — May 25, 2008 @ 7:36 pm

  13. Um, there’s not a chance this is real. Aside from the loops, which have already been mentioned, the pen doesn’t travel anywhere near actual airports. Notice all those long, aimless, over-sea legs that don’t go anywhere, don’t touch down. Completely ridiculous.

    Comment by Fnarf — May 25, 2008 @ 8:20 pm

  14. Yea, I was also wondering about the upper loops. Are there any islands someone could use to drive around the briefcase? Doubt it.

    Comment by chr4004 — May 25, 2008 @ 8:24 pm

  15. [...] 277 – The Biggest Drawing In the World « Strange Maps [...]

    Pingback by Diigo Daily 05/26/2008 — Simplicissimus — May 26, 2008 @ 12:32 am

  16. It’s easier to draw a bigger one over the whole Galaxy ;-).
    At least, I’d be curious to see someone travel around the world over that route, hehehe.

    Comment by Gebeleizis — May 26, 2008 @ 2:00 am

  17. This is basically impossible. First of all, GPS devices need to have a clear field of view to the sky so they can track the GPS satellites. Obviously, this is impossible when the device is in a suitcase placed in a plane.

    Furthermore, no (cargo) airline would allow a basically unknown device with a huge battery to be operational –without any control– on their aircraft. The device could cause electronic interference or cause an explosion (willfully or not, it can happen with batteries).

    Comment by Andy — May 26, 2008 @ 2:13 am

  18. Where did the briefcase land in Indonesia? At small village in Sumatra Island?

    Comment by sapteka — May 26, 2008 @ 2:56 am

  19. Well, I think all that flying about is worth it to create the masterpiece “Wayne Coyne Blesses Australia”.

    Comment by Rey Fox — May 26, 2008 @ 3:46 am

  20. According to their website, you can apparently order DHL to have items sent to specific Lat/Lon coordinates, even in the Arctic! If it’s not a hoax, what a criminal waste of resources. But, I’m not too worried – he’d have to be phenomenally wealthy to get DHL to go along with it, and something tells me the phenomenally wealthy have better things to do with their money.

    And what did Australia do to earn all the love?

    Comment by Michael Hancock — May 26, 2008 @ 4:49 am

  21. A Hoax, the film shows an electric train wich should be, according to the subtitles, located at Cartagena (Colombia) but acctualy it`s the electric railway of Palma – Soller on the island Mallorca near Spain.

    Comment by Gérard — May 26, 2008 @ 8:51 am

  22. he he cool

    Comment by gujaratikavita — May 26, 2008 @ 11:18 am

  23. @_@

    Comment by littlemisspixie — May 26, 2008 @ 4:04 pm

  24. [...] 277 – The Biggest Drawing In the World: [...]

    Pingback by 277 - The Biggest Drawing In the World · Mind-NOX — May 26, 2008 @ 4:54 pm

  25. Totally and utterly bogus

    Comment by Dan — May 26, 2008 @ 6:24 pm

  26. No such airports in Spain. Sad to say: hoax!

    Best regards from Spain.

    Comment by rafsebe — May 26, 2008 @ 7:01 pm

  27. I find it weird DHL carried the uncanny briefcase on its commercial routes. Looking at all the loops and detours needed to create this portrait, all the other cargo will have to suffer humongous delays. DHL would be facing multitudinous lawsuits right now or be out of business if this were true.

    Comment by bridex — May 26, 2008 @ 11:57 pm

  28. Hoax or not, it’s a much better self-portrait than the one Luke Helder was trying to plot using pipe bombs in 2002.

    Link with map:
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0509-05.htm

    Comment by Rick — May 27, 2008 @ 1:20 am

  29. Even if it is real, surely the real artist is DHL here. Basically, Nordenankar has commissioned DHL to ‘paint’ his portrait.

    But I think we’re missing the point here – hoax or not, it’s just not very good.

    Comment by Frank — May 27, 2008 @ 8:31 am

  30. … and, all in 55 days! Yeah, right! Hahaha! (need to save this one for April 1st!)

    Comment by Robert — May 27, 2008 @ 12:46 pm

  31. Even before I looked closely at the drawing, I wondered to myself, how on earth did a GPS device take readings from inside a suitcase locked in the belly of a gigantic Faraday cage? GPS devices need a line of sight to the satellite network to function (they do not work well indoors or under forest canopy). Definitely BS.

    Comment by Rob — May 27, 2008 @ 1:45 pm

  32. How can anyone believe this b.s.?

    1) jet planes doing loops around the North Atlantic?

    2) a GPS with a 55 day battery?

    3) a GPS with memory for hundreds of thousands of waypoints?

    Comment by tde — May 27, 2008 @ 4:40 pm

  33. DHL Confirmed this as a hoax.

    Comment by john — May 27, 2008 @ 9:15 pm

  34. Here you go:
    http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/05/artist-says-he.html

    Comment by Andy — May 28, 2008 @ 2:32 am

  35. I was going to ask if the briefcase was returned on April 1st….

    Comment by michael5000 — May 29, 2008 @ 5:23 am

  36. Hmm even if it’s a hoax, I love the cconcept and to be honest it made us dream… and talk a lot. Isn’t it?

    Comment by cyril — May 29, 2008 @ 1:16 pm

  37. [...] project, appropriately named http://biggestdrawingintheworld.com. ???My pen was a briefcase contaihttp://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2008/05/25/277-the-biggest-drawing-in-the-world/Bright’s Blog The New StatesmanOver a kibbutz breakfast of boiled eggs, fresh salad, olives, hummus [...]

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  38. and what about the map projection- different projections would show different images. What would this look like on a globe?

    Comment by EJ — June 5, 2008 @ 4:23 am

  39. [...] Strange Maps (one of the coolest blogs out there, soon to become a book): “With the help of a GPS device and [...]

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  41. thanks

    Comment by games — October 15, 2008 @ 6:16 pm

  42. [...] Well apparently they wouldn’t. After the project was presented as fact on more timely blogs , these same criticisms began to [...]

    Pingback by whoadu.de » Blog Archive » The Improbability of Drawing the World a New Face — November 5, 2008 @ 7:39 pm

  43. You’ve done a great job here.

    Comment by Digital Painting — March 19, 2009 @ 7:19 pm

  44. thank you

    Comment by Tony — May 4, 2009 @ 3:42 am

  45. thanks for this map
    good 
    luck

    Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 8:55 am

  46. merci

    Comment by aspicco . — May 17, 2009 @ 6:40 am

  47. Vielen Dank

    Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 5:15 am

  48. Muchas gracias

    Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:39 am

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