The Dream Atlas is an experimental mapping project that explores the spatial and temporal patterns of dreams documented across human history. Drawing from recorded dream narratives—from ancient, classical, medieval, and modern sources to contemporary dream reports—the project geospatially maps where and how different types of dreams occur, enabling new insights into the collective imagination and unconscious experience.
The project traces both the geographic dimensions of dreaming and the evolution of recurring dream archetypes such as falling, flying, fighting, and escaping. These themes are visualised across epochs and cultures to examine how dream content reflects shifting cultural, psychological, and environmental conditions over time. The mapping experience is developed in dialogue with original sound work by composer Maja Gutman Mušič, whose music adds an affective layer to the interpretation of dream data.
The Dream Atlas sits at the intersection of design research, geospatial analysis, and narrative cartography. Dreams are treated not as isolated psychological artefacts, but as culturally embedded records shaped by place, time, and social context.
The project combines longitudinal mapping of dream records across centuries with thematic categorisation of archetypes. Interactive visualisation supports exploratory navigation across temporal layers, geographic regions, and narrative clusters, encouraging reflective engagement rather than fixed interpretation.
The Dream Atlas combines spatial, temporal, and narrative visual layers to reveal patterns within collective dream experience:
The project reframes dreams as spatial and cultural phenomena. By visualising how dream archetypes persist and transform across geography and time, The Dream Atlas offers new ways of understanding collective imagination, cultural memory, and the relationship between unconscious narratives and human systems.
The Dream Atlas was presented at the Dream x Engineering (DxE) Symposium at the MIT Media Lab, where it featured in panel discussions exploring the intersection of dream research, design, and engineering. The presentation positioned the project as a design-led geospatial approach to understanding dream patterns across history and culture.