Cool Hunting
Harry Beck's iconic map of the London Underground is one of the most recognisable examples of design to come out of the U.K., but that hasn't stopped people from messing about with it to great success. Not least artist Simon Patterson in his 1992 work Great Bear, which swapped the station names with those of famous people.
Now, The Guardian's Dorian Lynskey has distilled his idea down to only include musicians and bands, with each tube line representing a musical genre. So, Prince is at the point where the pop, rock and funk lines cross-over, while DJ Shadow occupies the intersection of hip-hop, soul and avant-garde. Radiohead are, quite rightly, at the end of a rock line full of legendary, influential names.
It's not perfect by any means, but it's clever enough that I can't stop looking at it.
You can read the story behind the re-worked map at The Guardian, downlaod a pdf file and buy a poster at the London Transport Museum shop for £8.
Contributed by SummerSeventySix
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