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 ; à 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 ; For 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 wer
Brooklyn Bridge
9/11 MemoriaL
Statue of Liberty/Ellis Island
High Line
1000 5th Ave,
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
11 West 53rd Street,
350 Fifth Avenue,
Top of The Rock
30 Rockefeller Center,
1071 Fifth Ave.
American Museum of Natural History
79th Street and Central Park
Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort St,
2 Columbus Circle,
1 E. 70th St., Fifth Av
1260 6th Avenue
1 World Trade Center
476 5th Ave
460 Madison Avenue,
405 E 42nd St,
175 5th Ave, At 23rd St
99 Margaret Corbin Drive,
Roosevelt Island Aerial Tram
E 59th St & 2nd Avenue,
E 72nd St,
30 Rockefeller Plaza,
150 West 17th Street,
830 5th Ave,
Brooklyn
Brooklyn Heights
Park Slope
Lower East Side
, East Village,
Midtown
Spanish Harlem
Queens/
Williamsburg
Jean-Michel Basquiat DEAD
57 Great Jones Street |
The Beatles
first trip to New York
Warwick Hotel
65 West 54th Street
David Bowie 1947-2016
285 Lafayette Street
Marlon Brando
43 Fifth Ave at 11th st.
Sacha Baron cohen
2 river terrace
William Burroughs1914,-1997,
206 E 7th St
John Cage 1912-1992
105 Bank Street
James Cagney
391 East 8th Street CHILD
Truman Capote
860-870 U.N. Plaza.
dead
EE Cummings 1894-1962
21 East 15th St
Willem
de Kooning 1904-1997
85 fourth av
John Dos
Passos
11 Bank Street
Marcel Duchamp1887-1968(Studio)
210 West 14th Street
Bob Dylan
94 MacDougal Street,
Benjamin Franklin 1706 -1790 Statue
Spruce /Gold St,
Greta Garbo
450 East 52nd Street DEAD
Kahlil Gibran 1883 -1931
51 West 10th Street
Allen Ginsburg died
704 E 5th St
Dashiell
Hammett1894 – 1961
28 West 10th
676 Broadway
JIMI HENDRIX
Studios Electric Lady
52 West 8th St
Henry James1843 –1916
2 Washington Place, BORN
Jasper Johns 1930
278 Pearl St (site)
Jack Kerouac1922-1969
210 West 14th Street
Jeff Koons 1955 (Studio)
620 West 52nd Street.
Karl Lagerfeld 1933-2019
50 Gramercy Park North
Fernand Léger 1881-1955
222 Bowery
Lucky Luciano 1897-1962
265 EAST 10TH ST
Herman Melville
7 State Street, BORN
Piet Mondrian 1912-1872
353 E 56th (site)
Marilyn Monroe
444 East 57th St,
Bill Muray
, 450 SIXTH AVENUE
Astor Piazzolla 1921-1992
313 E. Ninth St.
Jackson Pollock 1912 -1956
46 Carmine St
Iggy Pop 1947
143 Avenue B
Elvis Presley
whenever he was in NYC
Warwick Hotel
65 West 54th Street
Giacomo Puccini 1858-1924
1515 Broadway
Lou Reed
56 Ludlow Street
Julia Roberts 1967
45 West 10th Street.
Theodore Roosevelt
28 E 20th St BORN
Keith Richards 1943
1 Fifth Avenue
J.D. Salinger 1919- 2010
300 East 57th Street
Meryl Streep
19 West 12th St
John Steinbeck 1902-1968
330 East 51st street |
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky 1840 – 1893
1384 broadway (site)
Dylan Thomas
Leonard Cohen
Janis Joplin
Sid and Nancy
Chelsea Hotel at 222 West 23rd
Donald Trump 1946
725 5th Ave,
Mark Twain 1835-1910
21 Fifth Avenue
Kurt Weill 1900-1950.
231 East 62nd St
Orson Welles 1915-1985
Mercury Theatre
110 W. 41ST ST., (site)
Tennessee
Williams 1911-1983,
235 East 58th Street
woody allen
Lauren Bacall
Dakota at 1 west 72nd St,
Sarah Bernhardt,
2107-2109 Broadway
Humphry Bogart
245 West 103rd St. CHILD |
William Burroughs,Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac
move into the communal apartment (1946)
419 West 115th St
Andrew Carnegie 1835-1919
2 E 91st St
Enrico Caruso 1873-1921
2107-2109 Broadway
Marc Chagall 1887 – 1985
4 East 74th St
John Cheever
61 Jane Street(site)
Joan Crawford
2 East 70th St
1957-1967
Miles Davis 1926-1991
312 W 77th st.
James Dean
19 West 68th St.
Robert De Niro
88 Central Park West
now 15 Central Park West
Marlene Dietrick
993 Park Av
Micheal Douglas
151 Central Park West
Isadora Duncan 1877 – 1927
1 West 67th St.
Duke Ellington 1899-1974
140 West End Ave |
George Gershwin 1898-1937
132 E 72nd St
Cary Grant
long-time resident
Warwick Hotel
65 West 54th Street
Peggy Guggenheim1898-1979
155 East 61st
Rita Hayworth
145-146 Central Park West
Ernest
Hemingway
1960
1 East 62nd Street
Boris Karloff
The Dakota —1 West 72nd St. |
Elia Kazan
167 E. 74th St
Grace Kelly
200 E 66th Street.
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
1040 Fifth Av 1929-1994
John Lennon |
Strawberry Fields, West 72nd Street,
The Dakota —1 West 72nd St.
The Savoy Hotel (767 5th Ave.)
Marx Brothers
179 East 93rd St CHILD
Arthur Miller 1915-2005
444 East 57th St
rudolf nureyev
Dakota
Barack Obama 1961
339 East 94th Str
Robert Oppenheimer
155 Riverside Drive CHILD
Dorothy Parker1893-1967
23 East 74th
Sean Penn
65 Central Park West
Edgar Allen Poe 1809 -1849,
85 West 3rd Street
Sergueï Rachmaninov 1873-1943
Basil Rathbone
151 Central Park West
Paul Robeson 1898 -1976 ACT MUSI SPOR ACT
COLUMBIA UN
555 Edgecomb Ave
John D. Rockefeller,1839 – 1937
740 Park Avenue
Franklin D Roosevelt
47 and 49 East 65th Street.
Mark Rothko 1903 – 1970
157 East 69th St
Martin Scorsese
217 East 62nd St.
Frank Sinatra 1915 1998 530 East 72nd Street |
Igor Stravinsky 1882- 1971
The Ansonia—2107-2109 Broadway (73th St.)
Arturo Toscanini 1867-1957
2107-2109 Broadway
Andy Warhol 1928-1987,
57 East 66th St.
New-York Historical Society
170 Central Park West,
The Dorilton
West 71st St
The Beresford 211 Central Park West
The El Dorado 300 Central Park West
Live and Let Die (1973)
Fillet of Soul, 2nd Avenue and East 94th Street, Manhattan.
Oh Cult Voodoo Shop, 33 East 65th Street
Ghostbuster’s possessed apartment building:
55 Central Park West,
The avenger Mansion 890 5th av
Alice in Wonderland
East Side at 75th Street
BROOKLYN
Arthur Miller
102 Pierrepont St.
Factory locations:
1342 Lexington Avenue (the first Factory) 231 East 47th-The Silver Factory-1963-1967 (the building no longer exists) 33 Union Square 1967-1973-The White Factory- (Decker Building) 860 Broadway (near 33 Union Square) 1973-1984 (the building has now been completely remodeled) 22 East 33rd Street 1984-1987 (the building no longer exists) |
waiting on a friend house
St Marks Place no 95-98
New Yorker Magazine
1 World Trade Center,
The Archive – 666 Greenwich Street
Little Singer Building565 Broadway,
L’E.V. Haughwout Building 488-492 Broadway
Forward Building 173 EAST Broadway,
AHRENS Building, NYC 70 Lafayette Street
Ghostbuster’s Firestation
14 N Moore St,
spiderman
175 fifth av
Saurien Calder 1975
590 Madison Avenue
Love Robert Indiana
W 55th St & 6th Avenue
charging bull
Broadway & Morris St,
567 Broadway (southwest comer, Prince Street)
Walt Whitman