Description
Se perdre sans se perdre
Se perdre pour se retrouver
Pour le plaisir de se perdre
Get Lost a l’idée originale de vous faire découvrir ou redécouvrir une ville autrement. D’un regard vous comprendrez comment elle se dessine. C’est une carte et un guide qui par un système de pictogrammes va à l’essentiel. C’est aussi par la richesse de tous ses dessins et de son esthétique un objet assez beau pour l’ afficher et vous rappeler votre voyage ou la ville que vous aimez
Cette carte sur laquelle plusieurs dimensions viennent se superposer concentre savoirs pratiques et culturels. Une ville s’articule autour de ses rues, de ses monuments et de ses musées, de ses théâtres, des ses lieux où errer de jour et où sortir la nuit, ses artères de shopping, ses restaurants, mais une ville se dessine aussi un visage à l’ombre de ses grands hommes. Des personnages de romans qui ont hanté ses quartiers, des films qui ont sublimé la ville pour en faire plus qu’un décor.
Get Lost vous fait découvrir la ville que vous venez visiter et redécouvrir la ville que vous habitez.
Des dessins, tous originaux, reprennent les principaux monuments mais aussi les belles façades, pour vous faire lever les yeux et voir ce que vous n’auriez peut-être pas vu.
Comme une ville, les dessins entremêlent les styles ;
A Paris par exemple :Gainsbourg en Street Art à son adresse taguée de la rue de Verneuil, Jacques Prévert en lignes pures s’inspirant à Saint Germain-des-prés, François Villon à la manière d’une gravure à l’ancienne, ou Picasso tel qu’il s’était peint.
Les pictogrammes forment le code du guide qui entend aller à l’essentiel, tout en restant ludique comme pourrait l’être un jeu de piste. Vous pourrez savoir d’un lieu si c’est un restaurant italien bon marché, une vielle boutique qui se révèle une institution, un bar LGBT, une boite où il faut voir et être vu, un jardin dédié aux enfants, une loge maçonnique, un club libertin, un bureau de poste, une galerie d art…
Leur popularité et les avis des voyageurs classent ces lieux pour mieux vous amener à l’essentiel
La carte guide Get Lost, esthétique, se pratique et s’affiche.
Les dessins tous originaux , et les effets de calligraphie ont été créés par plusieurs artistes pour ce seul projet.
Lose yourself without getting lost.
Lose yourself in the pleasure of getting lost.
The Mastermap is a new concept : It is fun & aesthetic, practical & cultural
with just a glance you will be able to understand the city’s form and structure. This map will be your guide !
This map, on which several dimensions are superimposed, concentrates on practical and cultural knowledge.
Architecture, museums, galleries, shopping,restaurants and favorite local hangouts,famous people, books and movies locations .
The city will be yours!
This is a map and a guide by a system of pictograms on the essentials. It is also for the richness of its designs and its aesthetics quite beautiful object to display it and remember your trip or city that you love
This card on which several dimensions are superimposed concentrates cultural and practical knowledge. A city is built around its streets, its monuments and its museums, its theaters, its places roam day and go out at night, its shopping streets, restaurants, but the city also draws a face in the shadow of its great men. Characters of novels that have haunted her quarters, films that have sublimated the city to do more than decoration.
Get Lost you discover the city that you visit and rediscover the city you live in.
Drawings, all originals, cover the main monuments but also the beautiful facades, for you to look up and see what you would perhaps not seen.
As a city, designs intertwine styles;
At Paris :Gainsbourg Street Art at its address tagged the Rue de Verneuil, Jacques Prévert sleek based in Saint Germain des Prés, Francois Villon in the manner of an engraving old, and Picasso as had painted.
The symbols form the guide code that intends to go to the essential, while remaining playful as could be a track set. You can know a place if it’s a cheap Italian restaurant, an old shop that reveals an institution, an LGBT bar, a box where to see and be seen, a garden dedicated to children, a Masonic lodge, a libertine club, post office, a gallery of art …
Their popularity and the reviews of these places to rank better get you to the basics
The guide map Get Lost, aesthetic, practiced and is displayed.
The original all drawings and calligraphy effects were created by various artists for this project alone.
vous trouverez : / you will find :
Albert Memorial
British Museum
Buckingham Palace
Churchill War Room
City Hall
Cleopatras needle
Écran, Hyde Park Corner
Freemasons’ Hall
Guildhall
Harrods
HMS Belfast
Houses of Parliament
Imperial War Museum
King’s Cross Station
Lambeth Palace
Lancaster housse
Liberty shop
London Royal Exchange
London Transport Museum
Madame Tussaud
Marble Arch
Old Admiralty Building
Royal Academy of Art
Royal Albert Hall
Royal Courts Of Justice
Royal Institute of British Architect
Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre
Southwark Cathedral
St Martin-in-the-Fields
St. Pancras International
St Paul’s Cathedral
Tate Britain
Tate Modern
Temple Church
The Black Friar
The Gherkin
The London Eye
The Monument to the Great Fire
The Old Operating Theatre
The Shard
Tower Bridge
Tower of London
University of London
Wellington Arch
Westminster Abbey
Westminster Cathedral
York Watergate
Battersea Power Station
University of Greenwich
Portobello Road,
AUSTEN JANE 1775-1817
10 Henrietta Street
BACON FRANCIS 1909-1992
7 Reece Mews (studio)
BARON COHEN SACHA 1971
Chester Terrace.
BARRETT SYD 1946-2006
2 Earlham Street
BEATLES THE 1960-1970
57 Green Street,flat share
The Beatles Please Please Me covers were shot here.
Location: 20 Manchester Square, London
The scene of the last ever Beatles gig, on the rooftops here.
Location: 3 Savile Row, London
This is where the Beatles wrote Yesterday and Eleanor Rigby.
Location: 57 Wimpole Street, London
BERLIOZ,HECTOR 1803-1869
58 Queen Anne Street
BYRON LORD 1788-1824
139 Piccadilly
BLAKE WILLIAM 1757-1772
49 Marshall st
CANAL, GIOVANNI ANTONIO 1697-1768
41 Beak Street
CARLYLE, THOMAS 1795-1881
33 Ampton Street
CHOPIN, FREDERIC 1810-1849
4 St James’s Place
COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR 1772-1834
71 Berners Street
CONAN DOYLE, SIR ARTHUR 1859-1930
2 Upper Wimpole Street
CONRAD, JOSEPH 1857-1924
17 Gillingham Street
DARWIN, CHARLES 1809-1882
site of 110 Gower Street
DE GAULLE, CHARLES 1890-1970
4 Carlton Gardens
DICKENS, CHARLES 1812-1870
48 Doughty Street
EPSTEIN BRIAN
24 Chapel Street
FLEMING, IAN 1908-1964
22 Ebury Street
FORD TOM 1961
York Terrace
FRANKLIN, BENJAMIN 1706-1790
36 Craven Street
GAINSBOROUGH, THOMAS 1727-1788
82 Pall Mall
GARDNER, AVA 1922-1990
34 Ennismore Gardens
GRIMALDI, JOSEPH 1778-1837
56 Exmouth Market
HANDEL, GEORGE FRIDERIC 1685-1759
25 Brook Street
HEMINGWAY ERNEST 1899-1961
84 Victoria Park (Dorchester)
HENDRIX, JIMI 1942-1970
23 Brook Street
HIRST DAMIEN 1965
Hanover Terrace
JONES INIGO 1573-1652
Somerset House
KIPLING, RUDYARD 1865-1936
43 Villiers Street
LAWRENCE, T.E. 1888-1935
14 Barton Street
LED ZEPPELIN 1968-1980
39 gerrard street
LEIGH, VIVIEN 1913-1967
54 Eaton Square
LENIN
16 Percy Circus
MALLARMÉ, STÉPHANE 1842-1898
6 Brompton Square
MARCONI, GUGLIELMO 1874-1937
71 Hereford Road
MARLEY BOB 1945-1981
34 Ridgmount Gardens
MARX, KARL 1818-1883
28 Dean Street
MELVILLE, HERMAN 1819-1891
25 Craven Street
MENDELSSOHN, FELIX 1809-1847
4 Hobart Place
MONTY PYTHON 1969
Neal’s Yard
MORRIS, WILLIAM 1834-1896
17 Red Lion Square
MOZART, WOLFGANG AMADEUS 1756-1791
180 Ebury Street
NAPOLEON III 1808-1873
1c King Street
NELSON, LORD 1758-1805
147 New Bond Street (site)
NEWTON, SIR ISAAC 1642-1727
87 Jermyn Street
O’CONNELL, DANIEL 1775-1847
14 Albemarle Street
PEEL, SIR ROBERT 1788-1850
16 Upper Grosvenor Street
POE,EDGAR ALLAN 1809-1849
146 Sloane StT
ROLLS, CHARLES 1877-1910
14/15 Conduit Street
ROSSETTI, DANTE GABRIEL 1828-1882
17 Red Lion Square
ROUSSEAU JJ 1712-1778
10 Buckingham St
SEX PISTOLS 1975,1978
6 Denmark Street, where Johnny
Rotten’s graffiti can still be see
SHAKESPEARE 1564-1616
21 New Globe Walk
SHAW, GEORGE BERNARD 1856-1950
29 Fitzroy Square
SHELLEY, MARY 1797-1851
24 Chester Square
THATCHER MARGARET 1925-2013
TURNER WILLIAM
21 Maiden Lane
VOLTAIRE 1694-1778
10 maiden lane
WELLS, H.G 1866-1946
13 Hanover Terrace
WHO THE (K.MOON OD)1964
12 Curzon Place
WOOLF, VIRGINIA 1882-1941
29 Fitzroy Square
HARRY POTTER
Platform 9 3/4,King’s Cross Station
jack the Ripper
29 Hanbury Street, Whitechapel
Shoreditch High Street
Dutfield’s Yard, off Henriques Street
algate
Durward Street, Whitechapel
whitechapel station
4th
Mitre Square, Shoreditch
aldgate
final
13 Miller’s Court, Whitechapel
Le Marquee était un club londonien où se sont produits de nombreux groupes de rock.
Ouvert en 1958 au 165, Oxford Street, le club est le théâtre de la première représentation publique des Rolling Stones, le 12 juillet 1962. Deux ans plus tard, le Marquee déménage au 90, Wardour Street,
20 Manchester Square London W1U, UK. This is what it looked liked when The Beatles took their album cover photos.
23 HEDDON ST ZIGGY STARDUST 1972 0 LA HAUTEUR DE F8 VERT
OASIS MORNING GLORY 0 LA HAUTEUR DE F 9 JAUNE
This is where James Bond lived, according to Ian Fleming.
Location: Royal Avenue, Chelsea
Love Actually filming location: All You Need Is Love – actually: the wedding at Grosvenor Chapel,24 S Audley St, Mayfair, London
The Thirty-Nine Steps Alfred Hitchcock 1935
location: Hannay leaves the milk cart: Park Crescent East, London W1
BLOW UP Michelangelo Antonioni 1966
El Blason, 8-9 Blacklands Terrace, a classy Spanish restaurant off the King’s Road in Chelsea,
Love Actually, Richard Curtis 2003.
BRIDGET JONES
Globe pub, Borough Market, London, SE1
Talbot Yard, Southwark, London, SE1 1YP
clerckenwell is the most used reference in dicken’s novel Oliver Twist
Mrs Dalloway :regent park 22 ref
Guy Fawkes 1570 – 1606), was a member of a group of provincial English Catholics who planned the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605.
and has been commemorated in Britain since 1605.
Oliver Cromwell Statue48
The house that inspired My Fair Lady
Prof Higgins lived at 27A Wimpole Street,
Blake and Mortimer
99 bis Park Lane
Grosvenor Square is the home Dorian Gray while he is going about being a bad boy all around the city of London
°138 PICCADILLY
DRACULA S HOUSSE
CONRAD THE SECRET AGENT
Irving Street
Absolute Beginners by Colin MacInnes
High Fidelity, by Nick Hornby