Azzara M VtP Analytic on Imagined Toxic Futures
This visualization is a means of rendering toxicity visible, which seen in relation to the other image of the language used by developers to obscure the toxic reality of the site is striking.
This visualization is a means of rendering toxicity visible, which seen in relation to the other image of the language used by developers to obscure the toxic reality of the site is striking.
Perhaps it could benefit from extending the discussion of this relationship between toxicity and invisibility.
This is a created image and is notable for producing a visualization of toxicity that is rendered invisible in the context of this project development. The image is creative and clearly articulates the message.
It would be beneficial if there was a way to enhance the image since it is slightly pixilated and difficult to read. Maybe also consider showing the step with the original statement, which might be a way to actually fully articulated everything your description says through the image itself.
This visualization says that toxics are often purposely rendered invisible through discourse and imaginaries around places.
This visualization represents toxicity imbricated in language based on text from a fact sheet. What is quite unique here is the representation of past, present, and future through language. As the author indicates, the images and its text description depict how toxic imaginaries can be shaped and transformed to represent‚or rather fabricate— future ideas detached from their toxic realities.
I think that the image and its composition are a very creative communication tool, however, it is not clear what words are at first sight. Maybe dividing the vocabulary inventory and allocating part of it in the top left corner and right-bottom would allow the author to have more space well distributed with legible words.
This is an original image created by the author, composed of highlighted words from a fact sheet report. The vocabulary indicates words separated into three color-coded categories each denoting a past-present-future imaginary about toxicity. I found it interesting how the author used the red color for representing the toxic past, blue for the present, and green for as a promising future. The designed visualization is diagonally shaped with the use of different sized lines, with small and big words interlaced among them, which can represent how history is built about toxicity.
The visualization tells us the fourth-part of a story about a toxic place, which aims to change its historical past marked by war-era toxicity through a renewed narrative detached from its toxic past. However, other narratives emerging from local activists put into consideration the untold history in the new development planning. Therefore, the visualization shows us a constructed reality of toxicity, with different representations and imaginaries through time.
This visualization creates a temporary toxicity inventory in Pasadena, California. Based on a series of documents, the author illustrates how the discursive practices that make toxicity or the slogan invisible in the distant past can be visually intervened. This intervention illuminates what was erased or circumscribed to the past, transforming it into a colorful visual representation of the (lineal) temporalities of toxicity.