拍品专文
This work is part of a 25 part series, based off of Nathaniel Bowditch’s alphabet, published in 1802 in The American Practical Navigator, which excludes the letter “J” in its mapping of the world’s time zones by longitude. Each letter spans a portion of the world radiating from 0 degrees, the prime meridian (Z) east until the international date line at 180 degrees (M), then continued to mark the portions west of the 0 prime meridian from N onwards. Meaning, the alphabet doesn’t go around the globe in normal succession but marks the origin of east and west at 0 degrees. Therefore “U”, for example, is counted as 120 degrees west of the prime meridian (Z), four segments (V, W, X, Y) from the international date line (M) rather than four segments from the prime meridian. “J” was chosen as the excluded letter of the Latin alphabet as it was deemed to be the only letter that most cultures cannot pronounce. Thus, this series is comprised of 25 letters, each marking both an intercontinental section of the globe as well as a time to which all inclusive countries theoretically are set.