Name: Janelle
Age: 23
Location: Orange County, CA
Occupation: Fine Artist, Foodie
Children: Socks, Seth
Interests: Art, Weed, Food, Beer, Horror, Sex,
Music, Comedy, Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of
Happiness
February 28th
6:33 PM
Via
hyperallergic:

Manifest Destiny! is about our God-given imperative as modern explorers, to seek out parcels of unclaimed territory and boldly establish a new home front in the remaining urban voids of San Francisco. 
Manifest Destiny! is a temporary rustic cabin occupying one of the last remaining unclaimed spaces of downtown San Francisco—above and between other properties. The cabin is affixed to the side of the Hotel des Arts, floating above the restaurant Le Central like an anomalous outgrowth of the contemporary streetscape. Using a 19th-century architectural style and vintage building materials, the structure is both homage to the romantic spirit of the Western Myth and a commentary on the arrogance of Westward expansion. The interior space of the tiny house can be seen day and night through the curtained windows, a lonely beacon in the city’s dense landscape, and an incongruous, haunting vision from below. The installation will remain in place and be slowly transformed by the elements through October 2012.
The cabin is a temporary site specific installation in San Francisco, California. The project was commissioned by Southern Exposure and funded by the Graue Family Foundation.
The project will be on view through October 28, 2012
Brooklyn based artist Mark Reigelman in collaboration with architect Jenny Chapman and engineer Paul Endres.

hyperallergic:

Manifest Destiny! is about our God-given imperative as modern explorers, to seek out parcels of unclaimed territory and boldly establish a new home front in the remaining urban voids of San Francisco. 

Manifest Destiny! is a temporary rustic cabin occupying one of the last remaining unclaimed spaces of downtown San Francisco—above and between other properties. The cabin is affixed to the side of the Hotel des Arts, floating above the restaurant Le Central like an anomalous outgrowth of the contemporary streetscape. Using a 19th-century architectural style and vintage building materials, the structure is both homage to the romantic spirit of the Western Myth and a commentary on the arrogance of Westward expansion. The interior space of the tiny house can be seen day and night through the curtained windows, a lonely beacon in the city’s dense landscape, and an incongruous, haunting vision from below. The installation will remain in place and be slowly transformed by the elements through October 2012.

The cabin is a temporary site specific installation in San Francisco, California. The project was commissioned by Southern Exposure and funded by the Graue Family Foundation.

The project will be on view through October 28, 2012

Brooklyn based artist Mark Reigelman in collaboration with architect Jenny Chapman and engineer Paul Endres.

  1. kmbrley reblogged this from hyperallergic
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  5. amoridifficili reblogged this from hyperallergic and added:
    qlla casina li su è un amore difficile
  6. versionb reblogged this from hyperallergic and added:
    Perhaps something Dubai...consider next. #Dubai #design #VersionB
  7. jessica-adams reblogged this from hyperallergic
  8. sockseth reblogged this from hyperallergic
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  11. iwishforanother reblogged this from hyperallergic and added:
    like.a.flag.in.battle.
  12. mostlyculture reblogged this from hyperallergic and added:
    i love love love this. need...before it gets taken down.
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  14. Mark A. Reigelman II submitted this to hyperallergic