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Infographics & Data Visualizations - Visual.ly. Painting by Numbers. Data Visualisation may be a hot topic right now but a new poster show at London's Transport Museum reminds us that getting complex information over in attractive ways is not a new challenge for the art director or designer Figures for 1923, by Charles Shepard, 1924 Painting by numbers - making sense of statistics will feature 20 London Underground posters, many dating back to the 1930s or earlier. The posters were designed not only to promote the benefits of travelling by London Transport but also in order to wow the travelling public with details of the remarkable service they were (hopefully) enjoying every day. Here, Speed, by Alfred Leete from 1915 reminds passengers of the dizzying speeds possible on the Tube, compared to alternatives of the time.

And What It Takes to Move the Passengers - Problems of the Underground, by Irene Fawkes, reminds passengers of the resources needed to make their journey. If you only read CR online, you're mising out. Exhibition - Sense and the City - London Transport Museum. Exhibition opens Friday 14 February 2014 Across the ages, London has produced and inspired countless stories. Fictitious and real characters and events in this amazing city have always held fascination, from anecdotal urban myths to grand tales of historic legend. London Stories, an exhibition featuring the best of the entries for The Serco Prize for Illustration 2014 features 50 works of art. Entrants were asked to create an illustration which visually captures a well-known or obscure London narrative; stories that are contemporary or historical, real or imagined. The shortlisted illustrations celebrate a vibrant, multi-layered London – urban myths, historic events, remarkable characters and London’s animal population.

Shop Shop for a range of products and posters exclusively from the exhibition. Background. Moritz.stefaner.eu - / Infographic Of The Day: Wall Street? Pfff. Protesters Should Be Occupying Congress | Co. Design. Congress is supposed to represent the typical American voter. And they’re supposed to do that, in part, by actually being like the average American voter. Just witness the number of congressmen who can be found in ads tooling around in pickup trucks or bouncing their grandkids on their knees. But Congress, if you look closely, doesn’t much resemble the rest of America at all. Consider this wonderfully concise chart, by illustrator Chris Piascik: Okay, technically the figure is 41% for the House and a whopping 66% for the Senate, based on 2009 data. (See a more detailed report, including which politicians are the biggest fat cats, at the Center for Responsive Politics.)

Whatever the precise numbers, the point abides: There’s a huge demographic gulf between Congress members and the electorate they’re supposed to represent. Does personal worth affect how they vote? [Top image by Elvert Barnes] Occupy George Turns Dollars Into Infographics. Occupy George is looking to inform the public of America’s daunting economic disparity, one bill at a time. By circulating dollar bills stamped with fact-based infographics, they hope to focus attention on wealth disparity in America. As the prints below show, its a fun idea with one small problem: The Bureau of Engraving and Printing prints about 16,650,000 one dollar bills each day.

So get crackin’, Occupy George! In the 90 seconds it took to read this, you have fallen another 17,344 dollar bills behind! > click for larger bills Category: Currency, Digital Media, Psychology. Fast Company - Occupy Wall Street Infographic. TEDxEast - Richard Saul Wurman - 05/07/2010. Information Is Beautiful | Ideas, issues, knowledge, data - visualized!

David McCandless: The beauty of data visualization. Edward Tufte: Beautiful Evidence (Highlights) Edward Tufte RGS 2010 _ eye | review. Anticipation was high among the audience for this rare public appearance by Edward Tufte in London. What could we expect from a lecture by a man described by The New York Times as ‘the Leonardo da Vinci of data’? Would we see classic Tufte; envisioning Tufte; quantative Tufte; ‘flatlands’ Tufte; ‘space-lands’ Tufte; sparklines Tufte? Art Tufte or science Tufte?

Would he touch all the bases and be generalist Tufte? Or specialist Tufte? The evening’s talk was structured around his ‘Principles of Analytical Design’ (published in Beautiful Evidence) and illustrated by Charles Joseph Minard’s ‘anti-war’ poster, which demonstrates Napoleon’s disastrous march to and retreat from Moscow of 1812. Tufte’s principles are as follows: 1) Show comparisons which aid contextual understanding particularly when seen mapped and scaled one to another. 2) Show causality. 3) Show multivariant data. 4) Integrate word and image. 5) Demonstrate credibility. 7) Show evidence adjacent in space. THINK. IBM Exhibit Celebrates Data With Infographics & Touchscreens [Pics] PSFK was invited to a special tour of the IBM exhibit at Lincoln Center. To celebrate their 100th birthday, the tech giant asked SY Partners to develop the ‘IBM interactive THINK exhibit’ to commemorate the past, the present and the future. The tunnel-like exhibit is split into three sections: a 123 foot video wall that reacts to real time data including information gathered at air-quality stations across NYC; a multi-touch movie experience that describes how IBM is analyzing masses of information to help overcome a broad range of issues including hunger and ill-health; and a gallery that paid tribute to 100 break-throughs the company has achieved.

The initial display is colossal and takes time to digest. A merry dance of preloaded and dynamic infographics streams down the exhibit. The touchscreen displays are probably the most advanced and simple to use displays that we’ve come across so far — and the visual language, while varied, was accessible and intuitive. IBM Think Exhibit. SYPartners. THINK Exhibit: An exploration into making the world work better.