Sports Illustrated Not Going to the Bloggers

Meredith Corporation unloaded Sports Illustrated for a mere $110 million last May. Marketing and brand development company Authentic Brands Group was the buyer. Authentic Brands, which owns licensing rights to companies like Juicy Couture and celebrities like Muhammad Ali, has zero experience running a media company. Given their need for help, the new owner of […]

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Diagrams of Power: Visualizing, Mapping, and Performing Resistance

Diagrams of Power: Visualizing, Mapping, and Performing Resistance, edited by Patricio Dávila.

Onomatopee describes the book: We draw diagrams to help us think, communicate and put forth what we think is important or what we want to be true. While some diagrams are seen as statements of fact, they can also further agendas by discounting other realities beneath a cloak of perceived objectivity. Diagrams of power work against representations that claim omniscience by speaking from a position, and making visible what and who gets represented and who does the representing. They also make us consider how we create and maintain relations between producers and receivers of particular forms of knowledge.

Diagrams of Power: Visualizing, Mapping, and Performing Resistance, brings together the work of designers, artists, cartographers, geographers, researchers and activists who create diagrams to tell inconvenient stories that upset and resist the status quo.


Iconoclasistas, ¿A quién pertenece la tierra? (Who owns the land?), 2017

I’ve reviewed books about cartography before. Like this one, these publications explore the work of artists, communities and activists who use maps as tools that give visibility and a sense of agency to disregarded issues. Who challenge dominant narratives, bring attention to neglected social problems, unearth hidden knowledge, reveal intricate connections, etc. In short, they reverse the top down approach to mapping.

This book is different from the others for several reasons.

First, it features the usual essays but also many transcripts of conversations between map makers. Guided by designer, researcher and educator Patricio Dávila, the exchanges reveal what makes these maps (or “diagrams”) invaluable: a sense of responsibility towards the people and territories visually represented, a close collaboration with these communities, the focus on a personal narrative rather than the claim of total (and totally unobtainable) objectivity, the need to distribute and make these maps accessibly to all, the importance of building multidisciplinary teams, the way maps can help even communities that need to remain invisible, etc.

And then there’s the cast! I already knew and admired the work of some of the artists, designers and activists involved: Burak Arikan, Joseph Beuys, Bureau d’Études, Teddy Cruz, W.E.B. DuBois, Forensic Architecture, Fonna Forman, Lize Mogel & Alexis Bhagat, Laura Poitras, Philippe Rekacewicz, Iconoclasistas and Visualizing Impact. I discovered others whose work and views were new to me: Josh Begley, Joshua Akers, Vincent Brown, Department of Unusual Certainties, Peter Hall, Alex Hill, Patricio Dávila, Catherine D’Ignazio, Fonna Forman, Terra Graziani, Lucas LaRochelle, Eliana MacDonald, Julie Mehretu, Ogimaa Mikana, Margaret Pearce, Sheila Sampath.

A quick walk through some of the works i discovered or rediscovered in the book should give you an idea of the breadth of perspectives and the diversity of voices Diagrams of Power presents:


Ogimaa Mikana, an (unofficial) street sign in Toronto that displays its indigenous name. Credit: Tyana Grundig

Artist collective Ogimaa Mikana pushes back against the erosion of indigenous presence in Canada. One of their most famous actions consisted in installing billboards, street signs and plaques in Toronto to remind/inform passersby of what the First Nation peoples called these places long ago, giving them back a history and a visibility. They also mapped indigenous communities whose presence had so far been left out of mainstream cartography and thus navigation systems.


“Income and Expenditure of 150 Negro Families in Atlanta, GA, USA,” from W. E. B. Du Bois’s ‘The Georgia Negro: A Study’ (1900) (via Library of Congress)


“Distribution of Negroes in the United States,” from W. E. B. Du Bois’s ‘The Georgia Negro: A Study’ (1900) (via Library of Congress)

W.E.B. Du Bois, the famous civil rights campaigner and writer, was also a talented infographics artist. In 1900, he led an all-black team who hand-drew stunning data visualizations for the exhibition, The Exhibit of American Negroes. The show, which took place both at the First Pan-African Conference in London and the Paris Exposition, also featured hundreds of photographs, patents and books by African Americans, a statuette of Frederick Douglass, etc.

Josh Begley, Best of Luck with the Wall, 2017

Critical cartography doesn’t tend to fall for data and its myth of totality. Josh Begley, however, makes a powerful use of data with a short film that travels across the US-Mexico border. Stitching 200,000 satellite images together, Best of Luck with the Wall reveals the vast scale of the Earth as observed from the sky, the artifice of national borders and the dishonesty of a politics that feeds on oversimplification and fear of the other.


Forensic Architecture, Iguala (satellite image) from The enforced disappearance of the Ayotzinapa students

Forensic Architecture exposes a cartography of violence from street corner to an entire state. Their work meticulously documents the events that happened in a small city of Guerrero in Mexico where, on the night of the 26–27 September 2014, students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College were attacked by the local police, in collusion with criminal organisations and other branches of the Mexican security forces. Six people were dead, 40 wounded, 43 students were forcibly disappeared. We still don’t what became of them.

Collective civil society undertook independent investigation to help investigate crime and confront criminal impunity and failure of Mexican law enforcement. Forensic Architecture reconstructed the events and turned testimony, interviews, videos and phone records into data-points that can be explored on an interactive platform. The platform exposes the relationship between incidents and actors and gives members of the public a more nuanced and faithful narrative that contrasts with the inconsistencies and distortions presented by official reports.


Lucas LaRochelle, Queering the Map, 2017

Queering the Map gives the queer community a platform to record and share experiences and memories in relation to places. The website spans all continents and many languages and operates from the perspective that queer existence is resistance.

In the early days of the platform, Trump supporters came out to troll and spam the growing archive with pop-ups reading: ‘Make America Great Again, Donald Trump Best President.’ A group of queer coders came to the rescue of Lucas LaRochelle, removed the malicious code added to the site and increased its security to protect it from future attacks.


Burak Arikan, Islam, Republic, Neoliberalism, (Network of Mosques detail view), 2012

Burak Arikan mapped the 3 dominant ideologies of Turkey, Islam, Republic and Neoliberalism, and their respective areas of influence in Istanbul. Interestingly, the network of the 3000+ mosques in Istanbul is connected through overlapping call to prayer sounds which can reach ~300 meters in radius.


Visualizing Impact, Visualizing Palestine, Bethlehem Besieged


Visualizing Impact, Visualizing Palestine, AIRBNB benefits from Israeli rights abuses

Visualizing Impact‘s most famous project, Visualizing Palestine, is a growing body of data-driven tools that champion a factual, yet compelling narrative of the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Their visuals covering political and humanitarian issues such as land appropriation, restrictions to movements, hunger strikes, water appropriation, Israel’s discriminatory transport system, child prisoners, etc.

The best surprise of the book was the chapter in which Lize Mogel and Alexis Bhagat look back at An Atlas of Radical Cartography, a collection of 10 political maps and 10 essays about social issues they had edited in 2007. Although they reflect on how much things have changed since then (at the time digital cartography wasn’t as accessible as it is now), it remains one of my favourite books both for its design and its content.

I also need to mention the essay written by geographer and information designer Philippe Rekacewicz. I was particularly interested in his reflection on the power of invisibility and why we don’t have descriptive cartography that would lay bare the way authorities and structures of influence function.

More books on cartography: Ecologies of Power: Counter Mapping the Logistical Landscapes and Military Geographies of the U.S. Department of Defense, This Is Not an Atlas. A Global Collection of Counter-Cartographies, Drawing the Line: Maps that shaped the 20th century, Book review – Visual Complexity, Mapping Patterns of Information, etc.

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Com novas opções de customização, Uber anuncia para novembro lançamento da modalidade Comfort no Brasil

O Uber anunciou nesta segunda-feira (7) a data de lançamento da modalidade Comfort no Brasil, que deve substituir o Select como opção de viagens de luxo no aplicativo principal da companhia para padronizar a linguagem da empresa no mundo. Prevista para entrar na plataforma no dia 21 de novembro, a categoria prevê uma customização maior …

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Boursorama: Brad Pitt

Boursorama Integrated Ad - Brad Pitt
Boursorama Integrated Ad - Brad Pitt
Boursorama Integrated Ad - Brad Pitt

Maggi: #withoutbuts

Video of Maggi Manifesto

Arcadia Yachts: Unexpected Elegance

Arcadia Yachts Print Ad - Unexpected Elegance
Arcadia Yachts Print Ad - Unexpected Elegance
Arcadia Yachts Print Ad - Unexpected Elegance
Arcadia Yachts Print Ad - Unexpected Elegance

The protagonist of the creative project is a fascinating and mysterious character – perhaps a shipowner – who wanders inside the yacht. The unmistakable mask reveals its identity, along with the total-white dress: it is the timeless Pulcinella, which evokes the Neapolitan culture and territory and symbolizes the inspiration and originality that so distinguishes Arcadia Yachts.

Quartz Editor in Chief Steps Down in Shake-Up

Kevin Delaney co-founded the digital publication in 2012.

The Road to Brandweek: Vans’ Nick Street on Fostering Creativity in Customers

Describing a marketing vice president as “off the wall” would, in most cases, be something of an insult–but not when it comes to Nick Street. For the past three years, Street has led global integrated marketing efforts for Vans, the athletic shoe that somehow manages the competing tasks of being a legacy brand and the…

MLS Enters Its Postseason on a Social and Digital Roll

The Major League Soccer regular season ended with Decision Day Presented by AT&T Sunday, with every team playing at the same time to determine the upcoming playoff slate, and the league took the opportunity to look back at its social and digital accomplishments. Senior vice president of media Chris Schlosser, who is in his 11th…

Quartz Searches for New Editor in Chief After Co-Founder Departs

Quartz co-CEO and editor in chief Kevin Delaney, who co-founded the business media organization in 2012, is departing to pursue other projects, the company announced today. Delaney will stay on for the next few weeks, he said in a memo to staff. “I’m still working out what my next projects will be, and look forward…

Tina Tchen, Ex-Obama Aide, Will Take Over Time’s Up

The group was founded by powerful women in Hollywood in the wake of the #MeToo movement. It aims to fight sexual harassment and assault in all industries.

Adweek’s 2019 Media Plan of the Year Winners; Tinder’s Adventure Game; Monday’s First Things First

Welcome to First Things First, Adweek’s new daily resource for marketers. We’ll be publishing the content to First Things First on Adweek.com each morning (like this post), but if you prefer that it come straight to your inbox, you can sign up for the email here. Adweek’s 2019 Media Plan of the Year Winners When…

Infographic: What Hispanic Consumers Want Brands to Do in Ads

Marketers can become a bigger part of the emerging cultural conversation across platforms. Streaming media has opened doors to brands trying to reach Hispanic consumers. Ahead of National Hispanic Heritage Month, Pandora surveyed the cultural landscape and behavioral attitudes of this growing market. The data reflects the diversity–how many Hispanic consumers are bilingual (35%), mirrored…

Agencies Show That When It Comes to Buying Media, It’s Not What You’ve Got—It’s How You Use It

This year’s winners found clever ways to resonate with the coveted youth market (we’re talking about you, Oh Henry! and Visible), channel a massively popular TV series for the greater good (Droga5), inspire organic participation from celebrities (Initiative) and so much more. Presenting the 2019 Media Plan of the Year winners, who proved time and…

KLM Future-Proofs Itself Through Sustainability Efforts and by Digitizing

KLM might be the “world’s oldest airline,” but judging from its digital presence, you wouldn’t know that. The company prefers to have a first-mover advantage when it comes to testing out new apps and technologies. Two years ago, it proclaimed to be the “first airline” with a verified WhatsApp business account, and it has its…

Healthcare Is Undergoing a Digital Revolution, Courtesy of Smart Devices

Looking for a healthy and active way to spend this weekend? Consider heading to the apple orchard. Apple farms all across the U.S. are predicting that the 2019 apple harvest season will see increasing crop yields. And who doesn’t love apples? The 150-year-old Welsh proverb “An apple a day keeps the doctor away” now carries…

Tinder Debuts Swipe Night, Its Apocalyptic Choose-Your-Own-Adventure Series

After much hype, Tinder today debuted Swipe Night, an interactive digital experience that will greet users every Sunday night this month when they open the dating app. Here’s how it works: users who opt to participate in Swipe Night will join a party that quickly devolves into apocalyptic chaos. Using the app’s swipe feature, they’ll…

Crystalline Sneaker Storage Boxes – The RCKZ Sneaker Box Puts Premium Footwear on Display (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Sneaker and footwear enthusiasts are often resolved to keep their most coveted pairs in their box to ensure they are kept in mint condition, so the RCKZ Sneaker Box has been created to help them…

Fundacion Española del Corazon Heart dieases prevention campaign: Run away from heart diseases!


Film
Fundacion Española del Corazon

 

Creative Director:Rosko Ruiz.
Art Director:Salva Ruiz
Executive Producer:Alberto Corchado
Producer:Juanma Rufián
Director:Dani Zarandieta
DoP:Manu Lamelas
Music compositor:Estudiomathica

Samsung: Art Portals


Outdoor, Mobile
Samsung

In Romania, The Long Night of Museums can seem really long because of endless lines, crowds and fatigue. How could Samsung, the supporter of #DoWhatYouCant, improve this experience? We created a new standard for art enthusiasts: Samsung Art Portals. We took over various galleries across town and set up connecting portals. Characters from paintings came to life and held Galaxy S10 phones that connected the galleries, allowing visitors to see the exhibits through each other’s eyes. Whenever someone used the portal in a museum, they became a remote museum guide allowing the other person to see a live stream remotely as accurately as if they were present where it is recorded. The experience was enabled by the Galaxy S10’s revolutionary camera that tweaks display settings in real time.

Advertising Agency:Centrade Cheil, Bucharest, Romania
Creative Director:Ioana Zamfir, Mihai Gongu
Group Creative Director:Roxana Nita, Adina Stanescu
Art Director:Eduard Cirstea
Copywriter:Luca Costea
Digital Business Leader:Gabriela Nanu
Social Media Coordinator:Radu Bucur
Social Media Specialist:Petruta Ciuica
Head of AV Production:Monica Garbur
Av Producer:Mihaela Racescu