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Lost is a computer generated inkjet print published in an edition of twenty-five of which Tate’s copy is number nineteen. The Irish artist Kathy Prendergast based the print on a map of America and the colours were enhanced by computer manipulation. On first inspection Lost resembles a standard map of the United States. It employs the familiar signs and symbols of map-making to represent the country, the land-mass being criss-crossed by red interstate highways, blue rivers and grey lines indicating state boundaries. However, on closer inspection it becomes apparent that the map is strangely empty, Prendergast having removed the vast majority of place names. Familiar reference points such as New York, Chicago or Los Angeles are missing because the artist only retained place names containing the word ‘lost’. The work is thus scattered with an array of paradoxical names such as ‘Lost Spring’, ‘Lost Creek’, ‘Lost Trail’, ‘Lost Hills’, ‘Lost Cabin’, ‘Lost Valley’ or ‘Lost Man Hollow’. The names describe real but unfamiliar places and the viewer is presented with an alternative map of the United States that invites imaginative participation.
In Lost Prendergast takes a familiar everyday object and subtly transforms it, subverting its normal function. Traditionally a map is thought to contain factual, as opposed to subjective, information about the location described. According to the critic John Hutchinson, a map ‘contains within it a desire for order and control.’ (Hutchinson, p.2.)Maps present the world as recognizable and hence knowable. They are tools enabling people to locate themselves in relation to the terrain described. However, Prendergast’s map makes the familiar strange and gently mocks such a desire for security, order and control.
Stripped of all reference points other than those which are ‘lost’, the map evokes the fear of getting lost in unfamiliar territory.
It might also refer to lost cultures, such as indigenous cultures that have been wiped of the map of America.Prendergast has worked with maps since the early 1990s and employs the conventions of map-making against the grain, the drawings exploring mapping as an imaginative rather than a classificatory system. Each image presents a carefully drawn graphite map of a major world city. Yet the cities are unrecognizable and the intricate, fragile images evoke imaginary maps of the brain rather than familiar locations.
Date liked: 2017/03/22 04:03:13
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Notational reblogged from: paintingyear1lsad
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cartography 108
map 95
geography 76
usa 72
wall art 18
united states 18
topographic map 12
north america 11
road map 2
highways 1