An indoor art installation with colorful floating circular platforms suspended from the ceiling, with neon signs on the walls reading 'Color of the Mind' and 'Less State of Mind', and spotlights illuminating the scene.

Cartologica: Reflected Coordinates

Cartologica: Reflected Coordinates transforms fragments of atlases into suspended circular forms that drift through space like floating coordinates. Through repetition, shadow, and spatial movement, the installation reflects on how geography, memory, and identity remain fluid rather than fixed.

The installation is composed of circular structures made from fragments of atlas pages mounted on lightweight supports and suspended at varying heights throughout the exhibition space. These elements form a dispersed constellation of floating maps that viewers can move around and beneath.

As visitors navigate the installation, the atlas fragments shift between legibility and abstraction, suggesting the instability of borders, territories, and personal histories. Maps—normally used to stabilize geographic knowledge—are here fragmented and suspended. Removed from their original function, they become visual fields of color, texture, and layered memory.

Light plays an important role in the work. The suspended forms cast circular shadows onto the floor, creating a second spatial layer that echoes the installation above. This subtle doubling suggests that every map contains another invisible map beneath it—an unseen geography shaped by memory, migration, and lived experience.

Through this spatial arrangement, Cartologica invites viewers to navigate a landscape where geographic coordinates and personal histories drift between certainty and ambiguity.

Exhibited at

Kunstpakhuset
Solo exhibition Rhythm of Identity, 2025
Curatorial text by Dalida Maria Benfield

 

An indoor room with multiple round tables and chairs suspended from the ceiling, with a person visible near a doorway at the back, illuminated by blue neon signs on the wall.
A collection of overlapping vintage maps viewed through circular glasses, displaying various regions, roads, and cities.