{{ 'fb_in_app_browser_popup.desc' | translate }} {{ 'fb_in_app_browser_popup.copy_link' | translate }}
{{ 'in_app_browser_popup.desc' | translate }}
{{word('consent_desc')}} {{word('read_more')}}
{{setting.description}}
{{ childProduct.title_translations | translateModel }}
{{ getChildVariationShorthand(childProduct.child_variation) }}
{{ getSelectedItemDetail(selectedChildProduct, item).childProductName }} x {{ selectedChildProduct.quantity || 1 }}
{{ getSelectedItemDetail(selectedChildProduct, item).childVariationName }}
Categories
Edited by Julie Joyce, Stephen Nowlin, and Hyesoo Christina Valentine
Hirmer Verlag GmbH
2025
Not enough stock.
Your item was not added to your cart.
Not enough stock.
Please adjust your quantity.
{{'products.quick_cart.out_of_number_hint'| translate}}
{{'product.preorder_limit.hint'| translate}}
Limit {{ product.max_order_quantity }} per order.
Only {{ quantityOfStock }} item(s) left.
This volume presents a visually rich examination of how contemporary art, design, and culture have responded to big data and its outsized role in modern life. Inspired by the growing field of data visualization, Seeing the Unseeable focuses on the myriad issues and inventions embodied in works by a dynamic range of twenty-first century artists and designers exploring the intersection of information and expression. Big data has spawned the growth of data visualization, the practice of representing vast quantities of information to make it understandable and engaging. In early forms, the field was used in maps and graphic charts, and viewed largely as a tool to convey information. In recent years it has become an influential force in contemporary culture, transforming visual literacy in the global cultural landscape. This volume reveals contemporary responses to data and its impact by Refik Anadol, Giorgia Lupi, Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, Sarah Morris, Fernanda Viégas, and many others.