Distributed by the Netherlands Media Art Institutehttp://catalogue.nimk.nl/site/art.php?id=17300http://realtime.waag.orgIn our everyday life, we usually follow fixed paths and trajectories throughout the day: from our home to work or school, to family, to familiar stores and to places where we spend our free time. We all have invisible maps in our head: of our immediate surroundings and of the roads we take every day. The way we move around in the city, and the choices we make in this process, are determined by this mental map.For the exhibition 'Maps of Amsterdam 1866-2000', Waag Society and Esther Polak together with Jeroen Kee were invited by the Amsterdam City Archive to produce a work about mental maps in that city: 'Amsterdam RealTime'. During two months, 75 volunteers were tracked by GPS in their everyday movements and routines around the city. These traces were then drawn as white lines over a black background. The resulting, animated map has a distinct look and feel of psychogeographic experience: it is not precise or rational, but expresses the intuitive and personal aspects of geography. It shows a city that does not consist of buildings, roads and water, but of the movement of its inhabitants. Thicker and brighter lines indicate greater frequency of travel. The map also was influenced by the variety of means of transportation: a cyclist will produce completely different traces than someone who drives a car. Once the participants became aware of their mapping outcomes, some even attempted to create artful GPS drawings. Interestingly, the final, combined map of all individual traces resembles an objective city map again.'Amsterdam RealTime' is a pioneering and seminal project that demonstrates intuitive, spatial relationships between urban residents and their city. It allowed the tracked participants to become more aware of their whereabouts and reveals a new form of shared experience. Viewers of the map get involved in a mixture of aesthetic experience, identification and participation -- but also a bit of voyeurism. In the installation and on the Amsterdam RealTime website, visitors can choose to browse and explore individual participants' maps or to see the combined map as a whole.credits:Amsterdam Realtime project credits 2002/2003Esther Polak - initial concept / artistJeroen Kee - design exhibition installation / artistWaag Society - research, development and project productionTom Demeyer - software development, technical leadAske Hopman - concept and project management, tech research, websiteMarleen Stikker, Floor van Spaendonck - concept adviceKari Anne Bakker (intern) - producerBente van Bourgondiën - postproduced CD animation/interaction developmentLies Ros- flyer and website header designIna Arends - protective portapack design and productionAmsterdam Realtime website version 2009 creditsEsther Polak / estherpolak.nlAske Hopman / ASKii.nlBente van Bourgondiën / b3nt3.nl
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