Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Lines)

Photo Installation

2005 - 2015

Theatrum Orbis Terrarum is an ever-expanding collection of photographs (over 9.000), assembled since 2005, that observe how people organize their living environments across the world. Theatrum Orbis Terrarum manifests itself in different public forms. Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Lines) is a series of shelves with photographs pasted onto the wood.

The title of the project references the first modern atlas – a fifty-three-page set of maps covering the known world, compiled in book format by Abraham Ortelius in 1570. Ortelius was less a scientist or cartographer than a collector, whose revolutionary achievement was that he brought together a vast body of existing geographical knowledge and unified it into a single, standardized format and logical system.

For Ortelius, unlike his successors, cartography allowed the reader to envisage the stage upon which history occurred. The maps were accompanied by texts in which Ortelius provided the reader, ‘tired of traveling’ the globe, with a narrative description of the various regions, animating the abstract pictorial language of cartography with details about people, flora, fauna and produce, along with vivid stories about the fortunes and misfortunes people had endured in disparate places. The wealth of collected histories and myths was accounted for with another novelty: an extensive bibliography listing all the sources Ortelius had been able to bring together. His Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Theatre of the World) was thus the first truly encyclopedic description of the world. The claim that the atlas was so comprehensive that it could be considered a mirror of the world resonates in a prefatory ode accompanying its 1598 abridged French edition: “This book by itself is the entire world; the entire world is but this book.”

Dijkman’s Theatrum Orbis Terrarum questions precisely this totalizing claim to knowledge of the Western cartographic tradition and the power over the world this knowledge implied. Her endeavor to assemble a collection of images of places is deliberately arbitrary and subjective. Though the photographs are taken around the world, they don’t claim to cover or represent the entire globe but are occasioned by what she encounters on her travels as she wanders around the places she is invited to. Like the counter-geography of the Situationists, the images, all taken at street level, do not suggest an omniscient, God-like perspective on the world but are located within it.

The atlas introduced a particular and highly selective form of representation that helped set the stage for particular kinds of relations to the world – while simultaneously claiming to be mere descriptions. Dijkman’s Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, by contrast, is not an atlas of landscapes and territories but an atlas of the ways in which man relates to the world he inhabits.

The form of the publication stays close to the original Theatrum Orbis Terrarum reference. But though it covers all 114 categories of human gestures identified to date and invites the reader to ‘travel’ through the theatre of the human world, it includes only a selection of the images collected so far, organized in a temporary formation, as a moment of repose in an open and mutable process of understanding how we relate to our world.

Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Lines)
Various installation dimensions
Matt photographs (30 x 45 cm.),
pasted onto melamine faced chipboard
(4 landscape format and one portrait format)
Invisible white wooden shelf

Theatrum Orbis Terrarum
Published by IKON Gallery (Birmingham, UK)
and Spike Island (Bristol, UK), 2011

Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (pdf. / 144 pages)

Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Lines), three shelves with 5 photos pasted onto wood, 2017
Theatrum Orbis Terrarum – Lines, interactive installation at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh, 2020
Theatrum Orbis Terrarum – Lines, interactive installation at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh, 2020