Being visible as an artist and designer means you constantly have to provide new material, new ideas to the table. Your work may seem invisible at first but as long as you constantly overlap the old with the new, your work, old and new, will become more visible. This represents that pattern of overlap and the more visible arrows represents your stronger work, the translucencies within the arrows are your earlier older ideas and how they have influenced your newest work.
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Issue 15
Visibility
Waiting to be Revealed
Infra
Don’t Ask My Real Name
Heels to Safer Urban Cycling
Revealing the Secrets Behind the Designs
Writing Without Words
Visual Complexity
Ghost/Writer
The Disappearing Architect: Four Moves Towards Invisibility
Detroit: Beyond the Figure-Ground
Digging Deeper
Visualizing Urban Hidrology: The Design of a Wet Surface
Ghost Streets and Disembodied Workers in San Francisco
The Wheel Thing
I know I’ve Seen the Master Plan
Blurred
I Did This in Twenty Steps
The Limits of Google
Atnight: Visions Through Data
Essay
I Did This in Twenty Steps
September 10, 2012
Short essay by Mark McGinnis.
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