Manfredi Pantanella

#Roundabout Cyprus

#Roundabout Cyprus

A surreal roadtrip all across Cyprus, observing with irony the consequences of the cypriot political deadlock on the topography and geography of this beautiful mediterranean island, split into two separate geographical areas (the turkish in the north and the greek in the south) since 1974.

The Only Visitor's map of Cyprus.

The work , exploiting the play of the images, is designed to underscore the concepts of division, confusion and nonsense. Like the cypriot political situation, the trip described in our self-publish, while being apparently open to every direction and possibility, seems, in the end, to be leading nowhere. Just as a Roundabout does.

The road network in Cyprus is as bizarre and confusing as the island's history itself.

Since 1974, Cyprus island is split into two separate geographical areas - the turkish in the north and the greek in the south - , each with its own language, culture, religion, legislation and political and economic system.

On the other hand, the maps available in the south still display the Greek names that were in use before the Turkish occupation of 1974, although Turkish Cypriots do not understand the Greek language and even use a different alphabet. Thus, for example, Kyrenia, Morphou and Ammostochos are also referred to as Girne, Guzelyurt and Gazimagusa. 

Mobile phones with Greek Cypriot SIM cards do not work in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. In addition, once the border checkpoint has been crossed, the GPS no longer recognises the streets' names, as the Republic of Northern Cyprus is officially acknowledged only by Turkey.

This is the motivation undelrying the "Roundabout#cyprus" project, is aimed at analyzing the consequences of the Cyprus political deadlock on the geography and topography of an island that remains, to this day, the last divided country in Europe.

This is the motivation undelrying the "Roundabout#cyprus" project, is aimed at analyzing the consequences of the Cyprus political deadlock on the geography and topography of an island that remains, to this day, the last divided country in Europe.

This system of duplicate names obviously leads to a great deal of confusion, and makes it nearly impossible to reach a destination following the directions of official maps.

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