731.52 cm of land by Nour Bishouty

Published November 11, 2025
Contributed by Mark van Leeuwen


Source: www.instagram.com Art Metropole. License: All Rights Reserved.



731.52 cm of land is a book by artist Nour Bishouty. The typeface used across the whole publication is Cortese Sans by Mark van Leeuwen, alongside SF Mada by Sultan Fonts for Arabic text.

The publication is presented as follows by Art Metropole:

Building loosely on the form of a pocket-sized travel guide, this artist’s book unfolds into a 731.52 cm wide miniature landscape. Composed of hand-painted and digitally illustrated images stitched together into a continuous sequence, the book includes a poem and short narrative by the artist, an essay co-authored with Daniella Sanader, and an afterword by Heather Canlas Rigg. A sticker sheet featuring animal and plant forms is included as an insert.

Functioning as a poetic visual-textual essay, the book unsettles the familiar logic of travel guides and the explorer’s gaze. It troubles the impulses of sightseeing, navigation, and tourism, while calling into question the authoritative languages of archaeology, botany, taxonomy, and cartography. It emerges from ongoing inquiries in Nour Bishouty’s practice around permission, legibility, and understanding.

Through critical reflections, lyrical fragments, and visual fictions, the book offers a layered exploration of artistic inheritance, colonial spectacle, and epistemic dissonance. It challenges legibility and authority, foregrounding ambiguity, misunderstanding, and refusal as generative strategies.




Source: www.instagram.com Printed Matter, Inc. License: All Rights Reserved.


License: All Rights Reserved.


Source: www.instagram.com Printed Matter, Inc. License: All Rights Reserved.


Source: www.instagram.com Printed Matter, Inc. License: All Rights Reserved.


Source: www.instagram.com Art Metropole. License: All Rights Reserved.


Source: www.instagram.com Printed Matter, Inc. License: All Rights Reserved.


Source: www.instagram.com Brian St. Denis. License: All Rights Reserved.

This post was originally published at Fonts In Use
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