Synaesthesia Magazine Atlas | Page 31

I’m attempting to combine my love for cartography and illustration to produce original art that’s both useful as a map but also beautiful enough to frame and hang on a wall. The piece I’ve submitted for this article is a bespoke map for a wedding and reception, showing the guests how to get from one location to the other. So much of how we define ourselves is centred on our sense of place. Our strongest memories are generally anchored to a scene. Chances are you can imagine yourself looking down on any area in which you’ve been truly alive. A special holiday, or a place where you spent your childhood. I’m trying to attach that personal sense of place to a cartographic product; creating artwork that not only tells you how the paths and roads knot together, but also conveys the essence of what makes a place special. All cartographers are dreamers. Every hand drawn map since the very first smudges on cave walls was an attempt to portray what saw when they imagined themselves as a bird, looking down at the world beneath them. A map is a shared dream, in which the person using it takes the same flight, pretending, for a moment that the piece of paper in their hands is the earth on which they walk. Even the strictest drawing office tutor will tell you that a map is a cartographer’s “personal interpretation of the terrain”. This is the gap between art and science in which cartographers move. “ This is the gap between art and science in which cartographers move