The Art of Geography drops some NFTs
You can now collect non-fungible tokenized versions of our art
25 May 2021
The Art of Geography is an exploration of the sense of place using cartography, art and immersive 360 panoramas.
We make digital fine art that explores the concept of a “natural field theory.” Living things and minerals may radiate energy in other fields that operate in a different temporal scale, and/or in wavelengths outside human vision.
Just as infrared film allows us to see a heat-field view of things, these artworks explore a vision of the natural world that fuses reflected light with an envisioning of other energy fields.
The Art of Geography distills geospatial information into digestable maps using well-thought out design and a clear hierarchy. Maps can help us understand our relationship to place.
Some of the Art of Geography's maps of parks, urban areas, and regions have become the official maps for state and city parks. We also make poster maps, very large wall maps and guidebook maps.
Virtual reality photography allows you to immersive yourself in a location at a particular moment. Look around, get a sense of what it is like to be there with Art of Geography panoramas.
We've shot over five thousand 360 degree scenes and are selectively publishing scenes from the archive.
You can now collect non-fungible tokenized versions of our art
25 May 2021
The cobbler's children rarely get new shoes. Or a website.
11 November 2019
Many maps would not be half as useful without one. And neither would this site. Graticule is the new name of the Art of Geography blog.
1 November 2019
Viewing Art of Geography 360 panoramas works in almost all browsers with no plugin required.
31 March 2019
The Topology series imagines what it might look like if you could see connections between constituent parts of our natural world.
19 July 2017
In 2011 the Art of Geography created a Portland bakery map just for fun.
30 June 2011
folded map icon by priyanka; panorama icon by supalerk laipawat; and Canvas painting by Ben Davis; all from the Noun Project.