Underground Street Food, Lower Haight-Style
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
As seen on The Wiggle.
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
As seen on The Wiggle.
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
This electric drug trip of a doorway recently manifested on the side of Amnesia. I had hoped and expected they were slinging sloths as pets, or maybe were some sort of preposterously pretentious a-lister exotic meats supper club, but turns out it's just a pop-up art piece shilling for J. Otto Seibold's latest book from McSweeney's, Lost Sloth.
Disappointing! (But well played, McSweeney's.)
Update: We walked passed a couple of times and never saw them open, but “Grizzled Mission” comments that they were open last night, selling “books, t-shirts, and baby clothes were all available, and sloth-emblazoned.”
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
Brian Goggin's “Defenestration” has become a San Francisco institution in the 16 years it's been spilling over into 6th and Howard streets. The chairs, bathtubs, tables, and grandfather clocks dancing towards their demise on the Hugo Hotel's abandoned walls has long brightened a bleak stretch of SoMa's thoroughfares.
So when news broke earlier this year the Hugo Hotel would be demolished, Defenestration along with it, many were rightfully sad. But, fortunately, Goggin is now working on a new structure just four blocks away at 9th and Market.
Goggin tells the Chronicle that “Caruso's Dream” will feature 13 grand pianos being shaken up by an earthquake:
“The whole piece is inspired by this moment when the opera star Enrico Caruso was awakened by the Great Calamity of April 18, 1906, while he was staying at the Palace Hotel,” Goggin says. “He did not know if he was awake or still dreaming as he was walking to the window to see the results of the ongoing earthquake.”
And the piece is more than just glass pianos:
A music and light component will be permanent. At night, the glass pianos will shine from within, like old incandescent bulbs. The sound of Caruso singing will be on KPH (Palace Hotel), recreating a station that once emanated from the hotel. At 90.9 on the FM dial, it will have a reach of 300 feet.
The piece is set to be unveiled on Feb. 23, with Goggin leading a New Orleans-style funeral procession from Defenestration to the new piece, including 13 pianists and three opera singers in tow.
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
What started as an IRL missed connection on Mission Street in early November…
…seems to have turned into a gluten-free romance:
Charming!
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
Brazilian twins Os Gemeos were back in San Francisco in September and painted two new murals, the first of which is above The Luggage Store on Market:
And the second (a collaboration with Mark Bode) can be seen behind The Warfield on Turk and Taylor:
[Photos via Fecal Face and Os Gemeos, because my cell pics are terrible]
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
As seen next door to Doc's Clock.
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
Mat Stromberg's latest in Clarion Alley has it all: blue ants and red ants fighting over some human prey, a guy watching his iPhone get ripped out of his balmy, dying hands, and a nice gloomy mountain vista. And what is that ant-covered bespectacled bastard thinking about anyway?
Take in the full-size image (or go to Clarion Alley to see it IRL).