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Want BK on the wall? Get yer Brooklyn poster right here

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[sponsored_by name=”Brooklyn Poster” url=”http://brooklynposter.com/” logo=”http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0257/7487/t/3/assets/logo.png?312″ byline=”The defining image of Brooklyn is here.”]

Remember Saul Steinberg’s 1976 New Yorker cover, “View of the world from 9th Avenue“? In case you don’t, it shows 9th Ave, 10th Ave, the Hudson River and beyond it, a big block of land covering the rest of the country. That illustration defined the way New Yorkers saw Manhattan in relation to the rest of the world. But it wasn’t just about Steinberg’s vision. Steinberg was illustrating the way New Yorkers already viewed themselves and their city. Now, Brooklyn Poster illustrates the world from Brooklyn’s perspective.

Over the course of several months, BlankSlate created an illustration that defines Brooklyn’s image of itself, to pay homage to the New Yorker cover and poke a bit of fun at it. From Brooklyn’s perspective, the tiny island of Manhattan is pushed off to the side.

Brooklyn Poster closeup

When it comes to Brooklyn itself, you can see landmarks like Grand Army Plaza, the Brooklyn Public Library, the Williamsburg Savings Bank, the Barclays Center, the Brooklyn Museum and Botanic Gardens, McCarren Park, the Domino Sugar Factory and Coney Island. There are the people on the streets, riding bikes, in the windows of apartment buildings and on boats. The illustration is not an accurate map, but a creative take on the way Brooklynites see their borough.

Brooklyn Poster Grand Army Plaza closeup

The team behind Brooklyn Poster knows how much people are already excited about Brooklyn’s thriving lifestyle, arts and culture, and wants to add to that conversation with a line of merchandise that’s not just designed and printed in Brooklyn, but is also about Brooklyn.

Brooklyn Poster in Mouth Office

BlankSlate already knows a lot about Brooklyn as they help advertisers connect with audiences through the largest network of websites in Brooklyn, including Brooklyn FleaBrownstonerBrokelynBrooklyn BasedBrooklyn MagazineThe L MagazineUntapped Cities and Dumbo NYC. The team is always watching new developments and looking towards Brooklyn’s future.

For now, the poster is available as a 24″ x 36″ offset print, as an 18″ x 24″ high quality giclée, and as a limited edition 24″ x 36″ giclée. Follow Brooklyn Poster on Facebook and Twitter @BrooklynPoster to get updates on new merchandise, including a line of notecards, t-shirts, tote bags, iPhone and iPad cases, and more.

8 Comments

  1. Nicole

    My Aunt, who lived in Brooklyn, had a poster with the same exact concept hanging in her house in the 1980’s. This is just an updated version of the same thing.

  2. My neighborhood was also left out (Flatbush), but I still kind of like the poster. I am curious, however, as to why Brokelyn is totally cool with blatant product pushing on their blog. The post was written by the company producing the posters.

    • It’s not a desire to be included, it’s that your “artistic representation” includes the Prospect Expressway instead of the 2 neighborhoods that border it. I’m glad an expressway is more “artistic” than brownstones, row houses, and a couple of working class neighborhoods.

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