21 episodes

Behind every beautiful visualization, there is a human bringing their unique experiences into the final piece. Pollinate is a monthly podcast where we dive deep with people on the trials and triumphs that led them to where they are today, lauding the projects and practices that turn our heads towards patterns and stories uniquely told through maps, data visualization, and design.

Pollinate Stamen Design

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 4 Ratings

Behind every beautiful visualization, there is a human bringing their unique experiences into the final piece. Pollinate is a monthly podcast where we dive deep with people on the trials and triumphs that led them to where they are today, lauding the projects and practices that turn our heads towards patterns and stories uniquely told through maps, data visualization, and design.

    Announcement - A Brief Hiatus

    Announcement - A Brief Hiatus

    We're taking a break from podcasting! Check out stamen.com/blog to keep up to date with what we're doing!

    • 34 sec
    19- Andrea Lipps & Curating Digital Artifacts

    19- Andrea Lipps & Curating Digital Artifacts

    Acquiring physical art for a museum requires a lot of planning and care. But what does it mean to acquire a digital artifact? You might be surprised to learn it’s less like the acquisition of a painting and more akin to how a zoo acquires a living tiger. In this episode, Andrea Lipps shares some insight into the inherent fragility of and challenges in acquiring digital media in her roles as a Curator of Contemporary Design and the Head of the Digital Collecting Department at Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum.



    Andrea Lipps & Curating Digital Artifacts

    • 40 min
    18- Denise Lu & Telling Stories With Maps

    18- Denise Lu & Telling Stories With Maps

    You can tell a good story with words. But a great story compels an audience through thoughtful visualizations. In this episode, Denise Lu walks us through her career in journalism—from her involvement in a student publication in college to her current role as Senior Graphics Reporter at Bloomberg News. We discuss what makes cartography and dataviz unique in a newsroom, the responsibility a journalist has when distilling complex events into a handful of graphics, and how giving a passionate PowerPoint presentation to your friends over Zoom could lead to an interactive article for one of the world’s largest media outlets.



    Denise Lu & Telling Stories With Maps

    • 58 min
    17- Jeffrey Linn & Speculative Cartography

    17- Jeffrey Linn & Speculative Cartography

    As we emerge from three years of pandemic, social isolation, and political instability, how do we as humans cope with living in an uncertain world? How do we find joy and connection while acknowledging the inevitability and looming threat of climate change? In this podcast episode, Cartographer Jeffrey Linn introduces us to the concept of “Speculative Cartography”, an imaginative outlet for coping with the harsh realities we face through fantastical and satirical creativity.



    Jeffrey Linn & Speculative Cartography

    • 30 min
    16- Mamata Akella & Collaborating with Maps

    16- Mamata Akella & Collaborating with Maps

    Collaborative tools for work and everyday life are more important now than ever before. Cartographer Mamata Akella brings “mapmaking thinking” to Felt, a fresh mapping platform that allows people to create maps together in real-time. With a portfolio of projects ranging from The National Park Service to Esri, Mamata has been a force in shaping the current state of digital mapping through brilliant design and innovative tooling. In this episode, we'll discuss the past, present, and future of collaborative cartography and how Mamata is helping Felt to push boundaries in web mapping for professional and casual mapmakers alike.

    Mamata Akella & Collaborating with Maps

    • 54 min
    15- Tanya Ruka & Mapping Native Lands

    15- Tanya Ruka & Mapping Native Lands

    Cartography is a powerful tool for understanding the world and our place within it, but sometimes maps conceal more than they reveal. Throughout much of the history of cartography, maps have been used to forcibly claim territory and exploit the land, erasing the histories and claims of the people who lived there before. Native Land Digital is a new organization with the mission “to map Indigenous lands in a way that changes, challenges, and improves the way people see history and the present day.” In this episode we talk with Tanya Ruka, a Māori indigenous multimedia artist and designer who is the new Executive Director of Native Land Digital, about acknowledging the land we live on, how to map uncertainty, and the role indigenous knowledge plays in the fight against climate change.

    Tanya Ruka & Mapping Native Lands

    • 50 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
4 Ratings

4 Ratings

ahartnyc ,

Art of mapping

This podcast is fascinating. It expands your perspective on what a map can be, and the art of creating maps.

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