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A map of Art on the Underground artwork locations was published in 2016 as the Art Map. [52] The project has also generated maps within local communities such as a Brixton Mural Map in 2018 [53] [21] and the Brixton Botanical Map in 2022. [54] [55] These were available for free at tube stations as well as being published as PDFs for download ...
Since 2004, Art on the Underground has commissioned artists to create covers for London Underground's pocket Tube map. [1] These free maps are one of the largest public art commissions in the UK. [2] Over 35 different designs have been produced, with designs from a wide variety of British and international artists. [3]
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 08:39, 28 October 2017: 829 × 601 (502 KB): DavidCane {{Information |Description={{en|1=Kennington tube station at the junction of Kennington Park Road and New Street (now Braganza Street) in Southwark on an Ordnance Survey Map. }} |...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Railway maps of the United Kingdom" ... London Tube Map.png 400 × 250; 148 KB.
We can start from pre-existing SVG maps, some samples, with the links below (in Commons) where you can find many others, this (due to the indexation deficits inherent in the large number of existing files) it is better to do a search from the Search Wikimedia Commons input:
Labyrinth 149, Redbridge. Labyrinth is a 2013 artwork by the British artist Mark Wallinger which marks the 150th anniversary of the London Underground.. The artwork consisted of 270 enamel plaques of unique unicursal labyrinth designs, one for every station on the Underground at the time of the installation in 2013. [1]
David Pike, author of 'Modernist Space and the Transformation of Underground London', expressed his belief that Patterson "discovered the dreams of modernism within the world of the 1990s in the same way that he found the dreams of the present lurking within the modernist space of Harry Beck's underground map", comparing the work to the writing ...
His Wonderland map has been described as a "mixture of cartoon, fantasy, and topological accuracy" and became "an instant hit with the travelling public"; using solely primary colours, London appears as a medieval town in a medieval map (for instance, using a "decorative cursive script and dotting chivalric shields" around the edge), [1] with ...