ground atlas
research + book chapter

atlas do chão,
ground atlas
book chapter developed for
atlas do chão (ground atlas) research group led by profs. Ana Luiza Nobre (PUC RJ) and David Sperling (USP)
“The Ground Atlas” is a counter-cartographic and historiographical experiment developed since 2020 and consolidated in 2022, conceived as an open, expandable, and potentially infinite set of maps. It consists of 200 points that evoke and problematize the process of Brazil's independence and its contemporary ramifications; 200 points anchored on the map, forming multiple connections of meaning, not through chronological alignments, but through associations and arrangements in time and space; 200 points excavated in the material of (im)permanences and (in)dependencies that the stories write and the geographies draw.
Organizers: Ana Luiza Nobre, David Sperling
Publisher: Rio Books
Number of pages: 200
Year of release: 2023
contribution with book chapter
“the bandeirante house”
year
2023
*indicated for Jabuti literary award
ground atlas
book chapter developed for
atlas do chão (ground atlas) research group led by profs. Ana Luiza Nobre (PUC RJ) and David Sperling (USP)
“The Ground Atlas” is a counter-cartographic and historiographical experiment developed since 2020 and consolidated in 2022, conceived as an open, expandable, and potentially infinite set of maps. It consists of 200 points that evoke and problematize the process of Brazil's independence and its contemporary ramifications; 200 points anchored on the map, forming multiple connections of meaning, not through chronological alignments, but through associations and arrangements in time and space; 200 points excavated in the material of (im)permanences and (in)dependencies that the stories write and the geographies draw.
Organizers: Ana Luiza Nobre, David Sperling
Publisher: Rio Books
Number of pages: 200
Year of release: 2023
contribution with book chapter
“the bandeirante house”
year
2023
*indicated for Jabuti literary award



stories for flying and landing, from the central plateau research+exhibtion
thesis presented at Architectural Association