Now available in a pull-out poster book, artist Stephen Walter’s celebrated hand-drawn map of London is “as much a guide to history and folklore as it is to the geography of the city” (The
Guardian). London’s streets, built up over more than two thousand years, are a maze of history, cultures, and stories. In his fantastically detailed maps of the city, Stephen Walter converts
the densely packed streets into a tangle of insightful yet humorous words and symbols. As The Guardian notes, “the features Walter selects [in a map] are by turns funny, crass, touching,
burlesque, murderous and uncanny.” Jokingly dismissing neighboring cities, the artist reimagines London as an insular body of land surrounded by water. The book includes posters of all 33
London boroughs that can be pulled out, framed, and displayed, and a further poster contains a key to the many symbols used by the artist to help readers navigate their way through the maps.
Walter’s cartographic creations have a cult following and his books enable a wider audience to immerse themselves in his personal vision that celebrates the art of mapmaking and pokes
intelligent fun at the city he calls home.