Monday, May 12, 2008

Mapping NYC by Photograph

Currently on view at the New York Public Library: Eminent Domain: Contemporary Photography and the City. The exhibition consists of six New York based artists who have each put together a photographic project with his/her own take on surveying the city.

Bettina Johae (a friend from grad school) contributed Borough Edges, NYC, a multi-faceted project consisting of over 2400 photographs documenting the boundaries of each of New York's five boroughs. I've had the opportunity to see this project in various forms as Bettina developed it over the past few years and this current manifestation is the best so far. The installation consists of a hand drawn wall map alongside five synchronized digital slide shows (one for each borough), and a wall-mounted book of framed prints for each borough, pairing selected prints with their respective locations on the line map.

In addition, there is a comprehensive website mapping all of the photographs, and Bettina is leading various bicycle tours along sections of each borough's edges (yesterday was The Bronx tour). The Internet component and the bike tours are integral in a way, because they span the full spectrum of the project. Bettina made her photographs while cycling around the city and as a result the project is in some ways limited to her own personal real-life experience of the city's edges. The only way to really get that is to travel the map and see it for yourself. On the other hand, Bettina accumulated a large amount of visual data which couldn't possibly be fully represented or absorbed in a gallery setting. In that sense, the project has really become about organizing and disseminating this information in a meaningful and useful way, and the Internet is particularly well suited to that end.
http://digital.nypl.org/boroughedges/

All photographs from Borough Edges, NYC, by Bettina Johae, selected because they are of the Bronx & Manhattan borders surrounding my neighborhood.

Labels: , , ,

2 Comments:

Blogger Ethan said...

Pretty cool project... The Marble Hill Metro-North image at the top of your posting gave me pause. It seemed to be reversed because the platform is on the wrong side... but that isn't right either (because uphill should be on the left).
Eventually I figured out that the image must be old and the platform has actually been torn down and rebuilt so that it is on the left, not right. (At least that's my best guess).

May 29, 2008 11:32 AM  
Blogger Michael Konrad said...

Wow, I don't know how I didn't notice that myself. The stairway definitely goes in the other direction, so your guess is a good one. They must have moved the stairway to the other side at some point. I've been living there for 2 years, and the stairway has been on the opposite side the whole time, so the picture has to be older than that. I'll try to find out.

They are currently replacing the retaining wall behind the train tracks.

May 29, 2008 11:45 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home