
Mapping the New World
January 15 – May 22, 2011
The exhibition is divided into three sections. The first is an explanation of some of the basic principles of map making and map use – Longitude, Latitude, and Projections.
The second and principal focus of the exhibition is a selection of 29 original maps that date from 1493 – 1847. Starting with a Ptolemaic map of the world as conceived in the Middle Ages, the maps trace the increasing geographical knowledge of the New World, finally focusing on the southeastern United States and Tennessee. Nineteen of the early maps come from the renowned collection of W. Graham Arader III in New York; ten come from the Special Collections at UTK. Included with the early maps are seven early navigational instruments on loan from the Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center.

Woodcut with hand color, Strasbourg, 1513
The exhibition ends with the third section that explores today’s geospatial revolution employing satellites, GIS, and GPS. Garmin, the manufacturer of navigation and communication devices, has loaned nine instruments that reflect some of the amazing options that are available. To illustrate the geospatial revolution, two short DVDs from Penn State Public Broadcasting can be viewed by the visitor. Exhibition curators are Kurt Butefish and Will Fontanez, UTK Department of Geography, Jennifer Benedetto Beals and Gregory March, UTK Libraries, and Michael Foley, Arader Galleries. The exhibition is sponsored by W. Graham Arader III, UT Knoxville Ready for the World: International and Intercultural Initiative, and Garmin.




