It's hard to appreciate the design of an airport terminal when you're rushing (or angrily waiting) for your flight. But we were struck by the strange beauty found in an exhibit recently featured in the Washington Post's Studio column. Artist Charles Cohan, an art professor and printmaker by trade, has repurposed the maps from the back of airline magazines into stark, geometric silhouettes. Hung up in the D.C. gallery Curator's Office, they look like hieroglyphics from the future. We had a few images sent to us for a closer look.
This spiny terminal is Frankfurt.
And this stripey one is Atlanta.
Do you recognize any of the other terminals from your travels? Let us know in the comments below (tell us the right or left wall, and the number of panels across and down, and we'll check your answers).
Photos: Courtesy Curator's Office









Very cool!
Anne
Posted by: Prêt à Voyager | March 18, 2008 at 11:02 AM
Right wall, first row, 2nd one from the left, I believe is Minneapolis/St Paul (MSP).
Posted by: Cynthia | March 18, 2008 at 01:16 PM
right wall. second row. sixth from left. Denver Intl
Posted by: L | March 18, 2008 at 03:40 PM
Very creative and exceedingly cool! Wish I'd thought of it :)
Posted by: Lola | March 19, 2008 at 09:15 AM