Perspective

This research argues that perceptions of place are framed through lived experience, emotion, memory, and bodily engagement, all of which influence what is noticed, valued, and represented. In contrast to conventional cartography, which treats space as fixed and objective, this project advocates for human-centred, experiential mapping practices that embrace diversity of viewpoint and fluidity of perception. Through photographic analysis and creative cartographic artworks, the research demonstrates how mapping can become a performative, interpretive act, revealing place as something constantly reframed through perspective.
Please click on the images below to see the projects related to a Perspective.