Analytics with Purpose Data Visualization Gallery
John Nelson

 John Nelson
 IDV Solutions
 john.nelson@idvsolutions.com
 @JohnNelsonIDV

 Major Fires Since 2001
 Each dot represents a moment of pretty extreme heat; down to the one
 square kilometer level (creator only retained fires greater than 100KW
 MW and of those only fires that the system was more than 50% confident
 of).
 They've been colored and scaled by "units" of the typical American
 nuclear power plant's summertime capacity to provide some sort of
 baseline of the fires' magnitude. There are a couple temporal charts in
 there, too. The seasonal curve the creator would expect, but the overall
 upwards trend was interesting.
Bloomberg Visual Data




John Nelson
John Nelson

 John Nelson
 IDV Solutions
 john.nelson@idvsolutions.com
 @JohnNelsonIDV

 Earthquakes since 1898
 The creator has been looking at general sources of existential risk and
 visualizing them via the kitchen sink school of thematic mapping. So the
 earthquakes map was just a matter of time.

 Here, data from NCEDC.org and the USGS and UC Berkeley have been
 sliced out into veneers based on magnitude, then glued onto and image
 that began its life at NASA's Visual Earth and wrung into the Times
 projection (centered at the interesting bits). The result looks an awful lot
 like a fleet of Nickelodeon tankers spilled the world's supply of floam.
Bloomberg Visual Data




 John Nelson
Weber Schandwick

 Weber Shandwick
 go@gobieta.com
 612.723.7424

 Gerardo Obieta - ART DIRECTION AND DESIGN - Weber Shandwick


 Funeral costs are going up, as are other expenses related
 to death. This infographic shows the increase in rates and
 overall costs.
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Weber Schandwick

 Weber Shandwick
 go@gobieta.com
 612.723.7424
 •   Gerardo Obieta - ART DIRECTION AND DESIGN - Weber Shandwick
 •   Anna Evenson - PROJECT MANAGER - Weber Shandwick
 •   Angela Role - ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE - Weber Shandwick
 •   Doug Hamlin - SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGIST - Weber Shandwick
 This infographic displays the impact social media reports the U.S.
 Army and its Army Strong Stories program is generating.
 ArmyStrongStories.com is the Army's premier community for
 Soldiers of all ranks and Army careers as well as Army supporters to
 share their meanings of Army Strong.
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Weber Schandwick

 Weber Shandwick
 go@gobieta.com
 612.723.7424

 Gerardo Obieta - ART DIRECTION AND DESIGN - Weber Shandwick


 This infographic shows how credit card companies make
 money and how they manage to stay in business.
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Weber Schandwick
Arthur Buxton

 Vogue magazine covers are the ideal barometer for measuring color trends in
 popular culture. Within each piece the small bar charts show the five most
 prominent colors, proportionally, in an individual Vogue cover. Each column is a
 year starting with September and working down to October at the bottom. The
 columns run from 1981 on the right working across to 2011 on the left.

 After viewing the work one becomes increasingly a where of the differences in
 overall national color palettes. The most striking trend is the recent preference
 for paler colors, which is evident on all three charts. Seasonal trends are more
 subtle. Gaps occur where covers are unavailable. Aside from seasonality and
 longer term changes in color trends, other, more quantitative data is evidenced.
 By looking at ‘Paris Vogue Covers 1981 - 2011’ we can see a sudden change in
 tones which occurs in late 1987. Colombe Pringle became the magazine's editor-
 in-chief in December 1987. The colours undergo a sudden change again in 1994
 when Joan Juliet Buck, an American, was named Pringle's successor’.

 More at arthurbuxton.com, including how to purchase limited edition art prints
 of Arthur's work
Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization
Timelines
Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization
Timelines
Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization
Timelines
Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization
Timelines
Bill Rankin

 Bill Rankin
 Radical Cartography
 bill@radicalcartography.net

 Tropical Cyclones, 1945–2006. Data from the Joint
 Typhoon Warning Center and the U.S. National
 Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration.
Bill Rankin




Bill Rankin, Radical Cartography
Bill Rankin

 Bill Rankin
 Radical Cartography
 bill@radicalcartography.net

 Frequency of lightning strikes throughout the
 world, based on data from NASA.
Bill Rankin




Bill Rankin, Radical Cartography
Background Stories

 Background Stories
 www.backgrountstories.com
 Arlene Birt, Visual Storyteller
 arlene@arlenebirt.com or 612.246.4234

 Bicycling Counts
 Inspired to celebrate the savings of bicycling, this
 traveling installation visualizes each passing cyclist in
 terms of individual and collective environmental benefits.
Bill Rankin




Background Stories
Bill Rankin




Background Stories
Bill Rankin




Background Stories
Bill Rankin




Background Stories
Bloomberg Visual Data

 Bloomberg
 bloomberg.com/billionaires
 Visual Data Team Contributors:
 • Lisa Strausfeld, Global Head of Data Visualization
 • Hilla Katki, Design Director Chris Cannon, Senior Designer
 • Kenton Powell, Designer - kenton@kentonpowell.com
 • Jeremy Diamond, Interaction Designer
 • Zach Schwartz, User Experience Prototyper
 • Alia Shafir, Project Manager
 • Illustrations by Lina Chen
 The Bloomberg Billionaires Index is a daily ranking of the world's richest
 people. In calculating net worth, Bloomberg News strives to provide the
 most transparent calculations available. Each Bloomberg Billionaires
 profile contains a detailed analysis of how that person's fortune has been
 tallied.
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Bloomberg Visual Data
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Bloomberg Visual Data
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Bloomberg Visual Data
Chris Harrison & Christoph Römhild

 Chris Harrison & Christoph Römhild
 chris.harrison@cs.cmu.edu

 The bar graph that runs along the bottom represents all of the
 chapters in the Bible. Books alternate in color between white
 and light gray. The length of each bar denotes the number of
 verses in the chapter.

 Each of the 63,779 cross references found in the Bible is
 depicted by a single arc - the color corresponds to the
 distance between the two chapters, creating a rainbow-like
 effect.
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Chris Harrison & Christoph Römhild
Hyperakt

 Hyperakt
 deroy@hyperakt.com
 718-855-4250
 Deroy Peraza, Principal + Creative Director

 Google: Evolution
 To visually represent the interaction between web
 technologies and browsers, which power the web apps that
 we use daily.

 Hyperakt Credits: Deroy Peraza, Eric Fensterheim, Margaux Le
 Pierres
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Hyperakt
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Hyperakt
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Hyperakt
Bloomberg Visual Data




 Hyperakt
Jessica Draws

 Jessica Draws
 http://jessicadraws.com
 Jessica@jessicadraws.com
 07540282420

 A commission from http://chinablueprint-online.com/ to
 advertise the benefits of using Chinese social media for
 Australian Businesses.
Bloomberg Visual Data



                 +      =




 Jessica Draws
Mintz Group

 Mintz Group
 www.mintzgroup.com
 James Mintz, President
 jmintz@mintzgroup.com
 212.489.7100

 This map pinpoints the location of bribes paid to foreign
 government officials that led to U.S. government penalties.
 The darker red that a country appears, the larger the total
 penalties assessed for Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violations
 in that country. An interactive version is available online at
 www.fcpamap.com.
Bloomberg Visual Data




Mintz Group
Bloomberg Visual Data




Mintz Group
Periscopic

 Periscopic
 www.periscopic.com
 kim@periscopic.com
 503-295-7946
 Contributors:
 Kim Rees, Dino Citraro, Mark Hintz, Katie Hill, Emma
 Alterman, Brett Johnson, Jacob O’Brien, Earl Swigert

 U.S. Gun Killings in 2010
 We wanted to show the huge loss of potential when guns are
 used in violence in America.
Bloomberg Visual Data




Periscopic
Bloomberg Visual Data




Periscopic
Bloomberg Visual Data




Periscopic
Bloomberg Visual Data




Periscopic
Bloomberg Visual Data




Periscopic
Rolando Salazar

 Rolando Salazar, Art Director / Motion Designer
 rolando36@gmail.com
 201-937-8588

 The client, Netmining, wanted to visualize the website
 categories that showed significant traffic increase after
 Hurricane Sandy.

 Client: Netmining, Lynda Liu, Marketing Manager
 http://www.netmining.com/
Bloomberg Visual Data




Rolando Salazar
Zoe Fraade-Blanar

Zoe Fraade-Blanar
Fraade@gmail.com
410-419-8183

Names of all contributors: Zoe Fraade-Blanar, Kevin Webb, Aaron
Glazer, John Keefe, Lev Steshenko

Hey Taxi
Volume of taxi rides in Manhattan on an average Tuesday at
4PM, during March 2009. Data is based on a record of GPS-tagged
taxi rides.
Bloomberg Visual Data




Zoe Fraade-Blanar
goGeo

goGeo
Adam Cohen, President, Cartifact
adam@cartifact-union.com
Dan Deloronzo, Product Manager, Union LLC
Graham Marrott, Cartifact-Union

goGeo combs the universe of live financial data to produce the first
dynamic global mapping system geared towards market makers.
• Live performance updates for every economy with a stock market in a
  unique choropleth map visualization
• Advance intelligence on upcoming earnings reports and data releases
• News heat tracking of more than 2,500 of the world’s most important
  companies
Bloomberg Visual Data




goGeo
Bloomberg Visual Data




goGeo
Bloomberg Visual Data




goGeo
Bloomberg Visual Data




goGeo
Bloomberg Visual Data




goGeo
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Peter Crnokrak
info@theluxuryofprotest.com
http://theluxuryofprotest.com

NEVER FOREVER NEVER FOR NOW
This is a quantitative visualization of the transient nature of empire. The visualization graphs
all known empires, colonies and territorial occupations from 2334 BCE to the present day.
Each empire occupies a slice of the pie graph with a known start (+) and end (×) date. Each
slice is assigned a transparency value of 10% allowing for concurrent empires to be
visualized – the more empires that occupy the same period of time in history, the whiter the
graph. As history progresses, humankind’s competition for wealth, resources and the
relentless drive toward conquest and occupation can be clearly seen in the graph.

The data shows an accelerating trend toward greater and greater conquest of territory and
greater and greater competition amongst imperial powers. The graph starts relatively light
(top right portion of graph) as early cultures maintain territory that can be considered
indigenous. With time, cultures encroach upon one another as shown in the heavy white
areas to the left of the graph (representing 900 CE to 1900 CE).
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Peter Crnokrak
info@theluxuryofprotest.com
http://theluxuryofprotest.com

EVERYONE EVER IN THE WORLD
Everyone Ever in the World is a visual representation of the number of people to
have lived versus been killed in wars, massacres and genocide during the recorded
history of humankind. The visualization uses existing paper area and paper loss
(die cut circle) to represent the concepts of life and death respectively. The total
number of people to have lived was estimated through exponential regression
calculations based on historical census data.

The sequence of dots to the top left of the graph shows the dramatic increase in
the number of conflicts over the past 5 millennia (left to right : 3000 BCE to 2000
CE) with the most recent 1000 years being the most violent. The large dot below
the graph represents the 1000 years to come: a predicted startling increase in the
frequency of human conflict.
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Peter Crnokrak
info@theluxuryofprotest.com
http://theluxuryofprotest.com

EVERYONE EVER IN THE WORLD
Everyone Ever in the World is a visual representation of the number of people to have lived
versus been killed in wars, massacres and genocide during the recorded history of
humankind. The visualization uses existing paper area and paper loss (die cut circle) to
represent the concepts of life and death respectively. The total number of people to have
lived was estimated through exponential regression calculations based on historical census
data.

The commemorative Science edition – the 3rd and final print of “Everyone Ever...” – is
entirely laser engraved and laser cut in heavy cotton paper. Laser engraving produces a
distinctive burn pattern with subtle smoke-like wisps that are particularly pronounced on
white paper. Being a subtractive process, engraving is a perfect process to convey the notion
of loss. The burn patterns also convey the concept of inferno which is in and of
itself, inextricably linked to destruction and death.
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
Peter Crnokrak
info@theluxuryofprotest.com
http://theluxuryofprotest.com

EVERYONE EVER IN THE WORLD
Everyone Ever in the World is a visual representation of the number of people to have lived
versus been killed in wars, massacres and genocide during the recorded history of
humankind. The visualization uses existing paper area and paper loss (die cut circle) to
represent the concepts of life and death respectively. The total number of people to have
lived was estimated through exponential regression calculations based on historical census
data.

As a contrast to the heaviness of the first “black” edition (which in itself has a direct
symbolic relationship to the void of death), the second edition printed on frosted semi-clear
plastic takes on a ghost-like transparency to express the same concept, but using
diametrically opposite language. The fundamental relationship of poster area to die cut area
remains, but the lightness of the milk-white ink on semi-clear plastic to a nod to the fleeting
nature of existence and the symbolism of loss – that life disappears as easily as it is created.
Bloomberg Visual Data




THE LUXURY OF PROTEST

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Analytics with Purpose Data Visualization Gallery

  • 2. John Nelson John Nelson IDV Solutions john.nelson@idvsolutions.com @JohnNelsonIDV Major Fires Since 2001 Each dot represents a moment of pretty extreme heat; down to the one square kilometer level (creator only retained fires greater than 100KW MW and of those only fires that the system was more than 50% confident of). They've been colored and scaled by "units" of the typical American nuclear power plant's summertime capacity to provide some sort of baseline of the fires' magnitude. There are a couple temporal charts in there, too. The seasonal curve the creator would expect, but the overall upwards trend was interesting.
  • 4. John Nelson John Nelson IDV Solutions john.nelson@idvsolutions.com @JohnNelsonIDV Earthquakes since 1898 The creator has been looking at general sources of existential risk and visualizing them via the kitchen sink school of thematic mapping. So the earthquakes map was just a matter of time. Here, data from NCEDC.org and the USGS and UC Berkeley have been sliced out into veneers based on magnitude, then glued onto and image that began its life at NASA's Visual Earth and wrung into the Times projection (centered at the interesting bits). The result looks an awful lot like a fleet of Nickelodeon tankers spilled the world's supply of floam.
  • 5. Bloomberg Visual Data John Nelson
  • 6. Weber Schandwick Weber Shandwick go@gobieta.com 612.723.7424 Gerardo Obieta - ART DIRECTION AND DESIGN - Weber Shandwick Funeral costs are going up, as are other expenses related to death. This infographic shows the increase in rates and overall costs.
  • 7. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 8. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 9. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 10. Weber Schandwick Weber Shandwick go@gobieta.com 612.723.7424 • Gerardo Obieta - ART DIRECTION AND DESIGN - Weber Shandwick • Anna Evenson - PROJECT MANAGER - Weber Shandwick • Angela Role - ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE - Weber Shandwick • Doug Hamlin - SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGIST - Weber Shandwick This infographic displays the impact social media reports the U.S. Army and its Army Strong Stories program is generating. ArmyStrongStories.com is the Army's premier community for Soldiers of all ranks and Army careers as well as Army supporters to share their meanings of Army Strong.
  • 11. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 12. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 13. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 14. Weber Schandwick Weber Shandwick go@gobieta.com 612.723.7424 Gerardo Obieta - ART DIRECTION AND DESIGN - Weber Shandwick This infographic shows how credit card companies make money and how they manage to stay in business.
  • 15. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 16. Bloomberg Visual Data Weber Schandwick
  • 17. Arthur Buxton Vogue magazine covers are the ideal barometer for measuring color trends in popular culture. Within each piece the small bar charts show the five most prominent colors, proportionally, in an individual Vogue cover. Each column is a year starting with September and working down to October at the bottom. The columns run from 1981 on the right working across to 2011 on the left. After viewing the work one becomes increasingly a where of the differences in overall national color palettes. The most striking trend is the recent preference for paler colors, which is evident on all three charts. Seasonal trends are more subtle. Gaps occur where covers are unavailable. Aside from seasonality and longer term changes in color trends, other, more quantitative data is evidenced. By looking at ‘Paris Vogue Covers 1981 - 2011’ we can see a sudden change in tones which occurs in late 1987. Colombe Pringle became the magazine's editor- in-chief in December 1987. The colours undergo a sudden change again in 1994 when Joan Juliet Buck, an American, was named Pringle's successor’. More at arthurbuxton.com, including how to purchase limited edition art prints of Arthur's work
  • 18. Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization Timelines
  • 19. Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization Timelines
  • 20. Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization Timelines
  • 21. Arthur Buxton Color Trend Visualization Timelines
  • 22. Bill Rankin Bill Rankin Radical Cartography bill@radicalcartography.net Tropical Cyclones, 1945–2006. Data from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center and the U.S. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration.
  • 23. Bill Rankin Bill Rankin, Radical Cartography
  • 24. Bill Rankin Bill Rankin Radical Cartography bill@radicalcartography.net Frequency of lightning strikes throughout the world, based on data from NASA.
  • 25. Bill Rankin Bill Rankin, Radical Cartography
  • 26. Background Stories Background Stories www.backgrountstories.com Arlene Birt, Visual Storyteller arlene@arlenebirt.com or 612.246.4234 Bicycling Counts Inspired to celebrate the savings of bicycling, this traveling installation visualizes each passing cyclist in terms of individual and collective environmental benefits.
  • 31. Bloomberg Visual Data Bloomberg bloomberg.com/billionaires Visual Data Team Contributors: • Lisa Strausfeld, Global Head of Data Visualization • Hilla Katki, Design Director Chris Cannon, Senior Designer • Kenton Powell, Designer - kenton@kentonpowell.com • Jeremy Diamond, Interaction Designer • Zach Schwartz, User Experience Prototyper • Alia Shafir, Project Manager • Illustrations by Lina Chen The Bloomberg Billionaires Index is a daily ranking of the world's richest people. In calculating net worth, Bloomberg News strives to provide the most transparent calculations available. Each Bloomberg Billionaires profile contains a detailed analysis of how that person's fortune has been tallied.
  • 32. Bloomberg Visual Data Bloomberg Visual Data
  • 33. Bloomberg Visual Data Bloomberg Visual Data
  • 34. Bloomberg Visual Data Bloomberg Visual Data
  • 35. Chris Harrison & Christoph Römhild Chris Harrison & Christoph Römhild chris.harrison@cs.cmu.edu The bar graph that runs along the bottom represents all of the chapters in the Bible. Books alternate in color between white and light gray. The length of each bar denotes the number of verses in the chapter. Each of the 63,779 cross references found in the Bible is depicted by a single arc - the color corresponds to the distance between the two chapters, creating a rainbow-like effect.
  • 36. Bloomberg Visual Data Chris Harrison & Christoph Römhild
  • 37. Hyperakt Hyperakt deroy@hyperakt.com 718-855-4250 Deroy Peraza, Principal + Creative Director Google: Evolution To visually represent the interaction between web technologies and browsers, which power the web apps that we use daily. Hyperakt Credits: Deroy Peraza, Eric Fensterheim, Margaux Le Pierres
  • 42. Jessica Draws Jessica Draws http://jessicadraws.com Jessica@jessicadraws.com 07540282420 A commission from http://chinablueprint-online.com/ to advertise the benefits of using Chinese social media for Australian Businesses.
  • 43. Bloomberg Visual Data + = Jessica Draws
  • 44. Mintz Group Mintz Group www.mintzgroup.com James Mintz, President jmintz@mintzgroup.com 212.489.7100 This map pinpoints the location of bribes paid to foreign government officials that led to U.S. government penalties. The darker red that a country appears, the larger the total penalties assessed for Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violations in that country. An interactive version is available online at www.fcpamap.com.
  • 47. Periscopic Periscopic www.periscopic.com kim@periscopic.com 503-295-7946 Contributors: Kim Rees, Dino Citraro, Mark Hintz, Katie Hill, Emma Alterman, Brett Johnson, Jacob O’Brien, Earl Swigert U.S. Gun Killings in 2010 We wanted to show the huge loss of potential when guns are used in violence in America.
  • 53. Rolando Salazar Rolando Salazar, Art Director / Motion Designer rolando36@gmail.com 201-937-8588 The client, Netmining, wanted to visualize the website categories that showed significant traffic increase after Hurricane Sandy. Client: Netmining, Lynda Liu, Marketing Manager http://www.netmining.com/
  • 55. Zoe Fraade-Blanar Zoe Fraade-Blanar Fraade@gmail.com 410-419-8183 Names of all contributors: Zoe Fraade-Blanar, Kevin Webb, Aaron Glazer, John Keefe, Lev Steshenko Hey Taxi Volume of taxi rides in Manhattan on an average Tuesday at 4PM, during March 2009. Data is based on a record of GPS-tagged taxi rides.
  • 56. Bloomberg Visual Data Zoe Fraade-Blanar
  • 57. goGeo goGeo Adam Cohen, President, Cartifact adam@cartifact-union.com Dan Deloronzo, Product Manager, Union LLC Graham Marrott, Cartifact-Union goGeo combs the universe of live financial data to produce the first dynamic global mapping system geared towards market makers. • Live performance updates for every economy with a stock market in a unique choropleth map visualization • Advance intelligence on upcoming earnings reports and data releases • News heat tracking of more than 2,500 of the world’s most important companies
  • 63. THE LUXURY OF PROTEST THE LUXURY OF PROTEST Peter Crnokrak info@theluxuryofprotest.com http://theluxuryofprotest.com NEVER FOREVER NEVER FOR NOW This is a quantitative visualization of the transient nature of empire. The visualization graphs all known empires, colonies and territorial occupations from 2334 BCE to the present day. Each empire occupies a slice of the pie graph with a known start (+) and end (×) date. Each slice is assigned a transparency value of 10% allowing for concurrent empires to be visualized – the more empires that occupy the same period of time in history, the whiter the graph. As history progresses, humankind’s competition for wealth, resources and the relentless drive toward conquest and occupation can be clearly seen in the graph. The data shows an accelerating trend toward greater and greater conquest of territory and greater and greater competition amongst imperial powers. The graph starts relatively light (top right portion of graph) as early cultures maintain territory that can be considered indigenous. With time, cultures encroach upon one another as shown in the heavy white areas to the left of the graph (representing 900 CE to 1900 CE).
  • 64. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 65. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 66. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 67. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 68. THE LUXURY OF PROTEST THE LUXURY OF PROTEST Peter Crnokrak info@theluxuryofprotest.com http://theluxuryofprotest.com EVERYONE EVER IN THE WORLD Everyone Ever in the World is a visual representation of the number of people to have lived versus been killed in wars, massacres and genocide during the recorded history of humankind. The visualization uses existing paper area and paper loss (die cut circle) to represent the concepts of life and death respectively. The total number of people to have lived was estimated through exponential regression calculations based on historical census data. The sequence of dots to the top left of the graph shows the dramatic increase in the number of conflicts over the past 5 millennia (left to right : 3000 BCE to 2000 CE) with the most recent 1000 years being the most violent. The large dot below the graph represents the 1000 years to come: a predicted startling increase in the frequency of human conflict.
  • 69. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 70. THE LUXURY OF PROTEST THE LUXURY OF PROTEST Peter Crnokrak info@theluxuryofprotest.com http://theluxuryofprotest.com EVERYONE EVER IN THE WORLD Everyone Ever in the World is a visual representation of the number of people to have lived versus been killed in wars, massacres and genocide during the recorded history of humankind. The visualization uses existing paper area and paper loss (die cut circle) to represent the concepts of life and death respectively. The total number of people to have lived was estimated through exponential regression calculations based on historical census data. The commemorative Science edition – the 3rd and final print of “Everyone Ever...” – is entirely laser engraved and laser cut in heavy cotton paper. Laser engraving produces a distinctive burn pattern with subtle smoke-like wisps that are particularly pronounced on white paper. Being a subtractive process, engraving is a perfect process to convey the notion of loss. The burn patterns also convey the concept of inferno which is in and of itself, inextricably linked to destruction and death.
  • 71. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 72. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST
  • 73. THE LUXURY OF PROTEST THE LUXURY OF PROTEST Peter Crnokrak info@theluxuryofprotest.com http://theluxuryofprotest.com EVERYONE EVER IN THE WORLD Everyone Ever in the World is a visual representation of the number of people to have lived versus been killed in wars, massacres and genocide during the recorded history of humankind. The visualization uses existing paper area and paper loss (die cut circle) to represent the concepts of life and death respectively. The total number of people to have lived was estimated through exponential regression calculations based on historical census data. As a contrast to the heaviness of the first “black” edition (which in itself has a direct symbolic relationship to the void of death), the second edition printed on frosted semi-clear plastic takes on a ghost-like transparency to express the same concept, but using diametrically opposite language. The fundamental relationship of poster area to die cut area remains, but the lightness of the milk-white ink on semi-clear plastic to a nod to the fleeting nature of existence and the symbolism of loss – that life disappears as easily as it is created.
  • 74. Bloomberg Visual Data THE LUXURY OF PROTEST