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Taken by Dina Buck in August, 2011 for the United Organisation for Batwa Development in Uganda, Kisoro, Uganda.

video mapping, projection mapping

video mapping, projection mapping

Participants captured at the World Economic Forum on ASEAN in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June 2, 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

NOT ACTUAL MAP, COULDN'T FIND MY MAP IN THE DATABASE. VERY SIMILAR LOOKALIKE THOUGH

 

Rennell’s maps of India led to the consolidation of India. His maps were also used heavily as a tool to use to conquer the country by plotting where all of the countries stockpiles of village, forests, rice fields, and other valuable goods because he was a huge supporter of the East India Trading company. It is no wonder why when you view the map you see the depiction of the Indian native bowing down to the all mighty British. After analyzing the map, it really serves a limited purpose because it is small and hard to see; however, the real focus and attention goes to the grand depiction of the British standing tall over the native.

 

From visually looking at the map, it looks like it is made out of some high quality paper because it was not as ragged as compared to the other Japanese maps and torn British maps. Even the drawing and architecture of the continents look more accurate by todays standards compared to the Japanese maps. The Rennel’s map I believe is important because it is made out of strong lasting material. This map is part of Rennel’s collection because in all of his maps he displays the rivers and all the mountainous terrain and coastal bays for traveling purposes. Comparing this map to the other maps, I wouldn’t really describe this map as having tensions with others map physically, even though in reality it does because it is an imperial map. Visually, looking at the map I would assume it was used for traveling purposes because it had the latitutde and longitude degrees on the side of the map which told it was most likely used on ships. It was probably a map used for getting around southern Asia. If I had to place in a group I would place the map under the categories of trade or sailing because it was obvious that it was there to facilitate those needs. All of Rennels maps are like this to support the British East India trading company.

 

Certain keywords I would choose to display this made is nautical, trade, imperialism, and power.

I chose the word nautical and trade because obviously it was used for those purposes. However, I used the words power and imperialism to talk about the picture at the center of the map. These maps are very important because these were used by the East India Trading company to go find supplies of value which can be anything from wheat to gold. These maps were more valuable than just directions; these maps had trade routes that are used as a tool of power were kept very secret. Secret maps like this were put on ships and were reserved for the captain. These maps indefinitely caused a monopoly on trade. For example, the signs of imperialism just resonate from the middle picture of the map from the Roman influence. Renell uses the similarities to Romans as propaganda to say how well their empire will do like the Romans. Here even you see the Indian native giving the British colonizer a paper or map like he is a superior figure or demi-god. Rennel emphasizes that the British will establish India as the site of glorious conquest and territorial agreement.

 

It is interesting when we were talking in class, we were talking about how political influences affect the process of making maps; however, Renall’s maps actually affected the politics into making the semi-states of southern India into a nation. Thus, seeing the result of this I would have to configure my keywords and add in the both politics and influence.

    

Hivemapper has developed a modern mapping platform that blends 3D mapping with computer-vision algorithms that automatically see and reveal changes happening in the world. (Image courtesy of Hivemapper)

Mapping vidéo « Le Royaume des rêves » sur la façade de l’Hôtel de Ville.

Treasure mapping for 2013. The first group coaching event held by me.

 

I'm studying to become a life coach later this year.

Mapping Mainz. Ein innovatives und interaktives Stadtportrait für Mainz

 

Mainz und seine Anrainer-Vororte werden auf künstlerische und innovativer Weise neu vorgestellt.

 

Wie sehen Mainzer, Besucher und Touristen die Gutenbergstadt Mainz? Fest verankert im Mainzer Leben sind die vielen gut dokumentierten Sehenswürdigkeiten der Stadt und ihrer Geschichte. Aber Mainz hat noch viel mehr zu bieten. Sehenswürdigkeiten ganz anderer Art werden in dem Projekt des Masterstudiengangs Gutenberg Intermedia dem Betrachter und Leser vorgestellt. Zehn wenig bekannte Orte und leise Monumente werden in der Arbeit „Mapping Mainz – ein fragmentarisches Stadtportrait“ individuell auf ihre Geschichte, Eigenheiten und mögliche Zukunft portraitiert.

 

Jeder Ort steht für einen der zehn Stadtteile von Mainz und der AKK-Gemeinden, die direkt am Rhein liegen. So wird das ehemalige Eislager der Mainzer Brauerei in Weisenau, die grüne Brücke der Neustadt einer Streichholzfabrik in Amöneburg gegenüber gestellt. Dabei entstehen detaillierte, mit Bild, Video und Tonaufnahmen kommentierte Stadtportraits, die stille und versunkene Orten zum Strahlen bringen.

 

Basierend auf der situationistischen Idee des Dérives, des ungeplanten Umherschweifens durch urbane Räume und einer künstlerischen Methodik, haben die Studierenden für sie unbekannte Orte in Mainz und Umgebung aufgesucht und sich diese durch intensive Recherche angeeignet. So haben sie Zeit- und kunstgeschichtlichen Merkmale des Ortes erforscht, seine Gegenwart ausgelotet und schließlich ihren gefundenen Ort gestalterisch neu interpretiert und mit Zukunftsvisionen versehen. Ihre jeweiligen ortsspezifischen Analysen haben sie anschließend in zwei medial unterschiedlichen Ausführungen – einer großformatigen Siebdruckarbeit und einer interaktiven Website – zu dem psychogeografischen Stadtportrait „Mapping Mainz“ zusammengeführt. Fragmente aus Geschichte, Gegenwart und Zukunft in Bild und Ton – bilden hier eine einzigartige Sammlung, die sich je nach Sichtweise zu ortsbezogenen Chroniken verdichtet.

 

Während die 7 x 7 m große Siebdruckarbeit dem Betrachter einen ersten Überblick über die gesammelten Ortserkundungen vermittelt, ermöglicht die Website www.mappingmainz.hs-mainz.de dem Betrachter ein interaktives Erleben dieser urbanen Räume und lässt ihn auf eindrucksvolle Weise den Vorgang des Umherschweifen durch interaktives Erforschen nachvollziehen. Überraschende und vielschichtige Informationen und Interpretationen kann der Betrachter in dem Online-Archiv zu jedem Ort nachlesen und sich akustisch auf die Orte und ihre spezifischen Geräusche einlassen. Zu sehen und zu erleben waren die Arbeiten vom 9. – 12. Mai 2015 in der Aula auf dem Campus der Hochschule Mainz, Lucy-Hillebrand-Strasse. Individuelle Fragmente der Installation wurden als limitierte Siebdruckedition zusammengefasst.

 

Grundlegendes Thema der Master-Projekts war die Ideenfindung für eine Gestaltung der Zukunft. In die Vergangenheit zu blicken bedarf eines bedachten, analytischen Blicks. Sich die Zukunft zu denken, ist weit weniger klar zu definieren. Die Herausforderung für die Projektgruppe in dieser Studienarbeit war es auf den fundierten Kenntnissen und Fakten, die die Trend- und Zukunftsanalysen vorgeben hinaus, individuelle Lösungen für Orte in Mainz zu finden. Dabei wurden gesellschaftliche, sozio-ökonomische, technische und gestalterische Aspekte an den Orten angewandt und durch szenische Dialoge ergänzt. So wurde jedem Ort und Stadtteil am Rhein eine mögliche Zukunft projiziert. Der Blick kann mit Hilfe der Website und der zahlreichen Artefakte, die für das Projekt zusammengetragen wurden, von der Gegenwart und Vergangenheit des Ortes in die Zukunft getragen werden. Über fiktive Monologe und dokumentarische Tonaufnahmen für und von den Orten werden Mainzer Monumente auch auditiv aufbereitet.

 

Intermedial und interdisziplinär manifestiert sich das Projekt als gestalterisches Realisierungsprojekt. Das Zusammenspiel von analogen und digitalen Medien, also von Siebdruck, Grafiken, Zeichnungen und Infografiken mit animierten Grafiken, Video- und Tonaufnahmen auf einer interaktiven Website zusammengefasst, bilden den Kern der Projektinnovation. Die verschiedenen Anforderungen der Medien in einem ganzheitlichen Gefüge zusammen zu bringen, ist bei dem Projekt „Mapping Mainz“ hervorragend gelungen.

 

Mapping Mainz

Ein fragmentarisches Portrait

www.mappingmainz.hs-mainz.de

 

Alexander Bothe

Anna Lena Hänicke

Bahar Hasan

Isa Hartikainen

Isabel Linnemann

Janina Rüsseler

Matthias Dübner

Michael Sherman

Natalia Chekonina

Stefan Valerio Meister

 

Prof. Katja Davar

Prof. Anna-Lisa Schönecker

Prof. Holger Reckter (Programmierung)

Volker Pape (Siebdruck)

Axel Becker (Programmierung)

 

Das Projekt wurde mit dem Gutenbergstipendium 2016 ausgezeichnet.

Ross and Theresa using the total station to map the sea cliff area of the site. Ayla is excavating.

Mapping: Rute Chaves and Lea Konig

Photo: Chris Nöel

Participants captured at the World Economic Forum on ASEAN in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June 2, 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe

projection mapping on karlsruhe palace by maxin10sity in occasion of the karlsruhe 300 anniversary

 

photographed by

Frank Dinger

 

BECOMING - office for visual communication

www.becoming.de

www.twitter.com/becoming_blog

pinterest.com/bcmng/

www.instagram.com/bcmng

 

facebook: Becoming office for visual communication

 

Mapping projections on volumes

with AntiVJ

 

Yannick Jacquet

Olivier Ratsi

Joanie Lemercier

Romain Tardy

projection mapping on karlsruhe palace by maxin10sity in occasion of the karlsruhe 300 anniversary

 

photographed by

Frank Dinger

 

BECOMING - office for visual communication

www.becoming.de

www.twitter.com/becoming_blog

pinterest.com/bcmng/

www.instagram.com/bcmng

 

facebook: Becoming office for visual communication

 

By Projection Mapping Masterclass at CHIJMES during Singapore Night Festival.

The guy at this table seemed annoyed at my being the "4th person" to ask if these were bend sensors. Can you blame me? Anyway, these were very cool. I could press the tip, of either of the left 2 sensors there (which were made of a very thin layer of something I didn't ask about) and watch the red and blue graph lines raise and lower on the monitor to the left of this image. I pressed smoothly and alternately harder and softer with both fingers and made the graphs dance in offset sine waves. It had a very fine resolution (seemingly far greater than 8-bit), no shivering or jumping, and according to Mr. Angsty, were quite durable, having been tested into the millions of presses, with only a very slight decrease in effectiveness, which is easily recalibrated for. They also had a chair loaded up with these things, through which were we treated to a rainbow display of one guy's buttocks pressures, akin to those seen in this buttocks pressures mapping, from the P.E.R.F.E.C.T. workstation. Oddly, the medical field is their biggest market, where they're used, for example, to test for things like blockages in implants.

a visual exploration of our slow book talk entry points (so far)

 

Video Mapping Brastemp Retrô feito em vitrines das lojas Fast Shop dos Shoppings Jardim Sul, Higienópolis e Anália Franco.

 

MAPPING: Midiadub

 

CLIENTE: Brastemp

 

AGÊNCIA: Simple

 

PROJEÇÕES: Modern Marketing

  

SCAT (Shoreline Cleanup Assessment Technique) training participants and course instructors. Tofino, December 2016.

A tone mapping experiment.

Participants captured at the World Economic Forum on ASEAN in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June 2, 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Participants captured at the World Economic Forum on ASEAN in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June 2, 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Participants captured at the World Economic Forum on ASEAN in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June 2, 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe

Ojos del Cielo y Laura y los branigan en la sala Zabala Muniz.

Mapping y visuales de Pandilla+Chindogu.

By Projection Mapping Masterclass at CHIJMES during Singapore Night Festival.

Mapping: Ilan Katin (left), Diogo Favoto (right)

Photo: Chris Nöel

video mapping, projection mapping

Nicole Bernard and Jess Rees' "Mapping Capitol Hill" was installed on June 8, 2011. The project charts the history of Capitol Hill through maps and a timeline.

Mapping projections on volumes

with AntiVJ

 

Yannick Jacquet

Olivier Ratsi

Joanie Lemercier

Romain Tardy

Award #1 in BCC. 2010-2011 BCC #1st Award. 12/07/2010 ===================This image was shot during a recent workshop with The Mindful Eye - Craig Tanner, at the Golden Canyon Trail one mile west from Zabriskie View. The image is a result of HDR Fuse technique made using Photomatix. Camera was a Canon 40D with a Canon EF 28-135 f/3.5-5.6 IS USM, effective focal length 35 mm. ISO 200, f/8, ex- posure bracketed at 1/8th, 1/15th, 1/45th of a second. Tripod and cable release were used, no filters. The image was cropped at around 3:1 ratio to render the panoramic effect. Further editing was done in Lightroom. I like this image because of the complimentary colors; the off white of the foreground dirt which is quite detailed, the brown orange violet purple in the middle, the purplish yellow brown in the distance and the blue skies.

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