United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

Via Colossal:

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

United States Map Made from Thousands of Wood Matches by Claire Fontaine  United States multiples matches maps installation fire

U.S.A. (burnt/unburnt) is a 2011 installation by Paris-based artist Claire Fontaine constructed from thousands of green matches that were inserted into a wall at the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art as part art of “Evidence of Bricks” at the 2011 Time-Based Art Festival. Fontaine has made somewhat of a name for herself with her match installations and flaming geography, most recently completing a similar U.S.A. map at Queens Nails Gallery in San Francisco. Unlike the installation in Portland above, the Queens Nails artwork was actually set on fire, and while it may not have gone exactly as intended, the final post-flame artwork is impressive nonetheless. Photographs above for PICA by Dan Kvitka.

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Ben VanderVeen is the founder and editor of Moss & Fog, one of the web’s longest-running visual culture destinations. Since 2009, he’s been finding and framing the most beautiful, surprising, and thought-provoking work in art, architecture, design, and nature — reaching over 325,000 readers each month. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

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