About Moogle Gaps...

Moogle Gaps is a collection of digital ephemera, like the emptying of a desk drawer: stories and drawing, histories, natural histories, adventures and of course maps. What I'm calling "Moogle Gaps" is a play on the new standard for mapping, Google Maps. Unlike Google Maps, Moogle Gaps will animate the gray and green "gaps" in the landsacpe, turning these spaces into places.

Place is a vague word and to narrow the concept I would define "place" as the connection between physical space and people. Place is created and ever changing, malleable both in physical landscape (think bulldozers) and meaning (think the Lorraine Motel). Unfolding these layers of meaning involves the making and reading of maps, the walking of boundaries, observing the cycles of birds and insects, and the questioning of history and culture. Place is at once unyielding like granite peaks and skyscrapers yet wonderfully temporal, contingent on ethereal things like the smell of hay, humidity, a creole accent or the sound of moving water. Spaces can be pinned to the wall on a map and photographed a million times yet these same spaces are somehow unique to each person, each time - this is place. I hope you enjoy and as always please contact me for questions, thoughts, or to share something about your places.


Friday, November 16, 2012

Du-du... du-du... du-du, du-du, du-du

Travel to Cape Cod, MA and witness the resurgence of the Great White Shark in Massachusetts. Like a scene out of a David Attenborough special but photographed from space, the beach is literally covered in Grey Seals. Grey seals are not the doe-eyed, round-faced Harbor seals that arrive in the fall but rather the horse-faced seals that spend their summer lulling around in the warm, shallow waters off Cape Cod. To find the seals search for "Monomoy Point, Chatham MA" in Google Maps. View the map in satellite view and travel along the thin, all sand beach heading north along the eastern shore (up and right). Look for speckles in the sand and zoom in to view several large colonies of Grey Seals. 


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