If the White House Was Made of Jell-O, Wouldja Eat It? I Know I Would.

Matt Shaw Matt Shaw

Remember that famous Will-Ferrell-as-Harry-Caray line, “We all know that the moon is not made of green cheese. But what it were made of barbecue spare ribs, would you eat it then? I know I would.” In the spirit of that rhetorical quip, what if the White House was made of Jell-O? Would you eat it? I know I would. And I’d go back for seconds.

San Francisco-based artist Liz Hickok has made my gastro-architectural fantasy one step closer to reality. She creates miniature Jell-O versions of the White House, New York, San Francisco, and other cities around the world. When her delicious, jiggly worlds are complete, she takes stunning photos, and lets the whole thing dissolve into a poetic mess.

Inspired by visiting different cities around the U.S., Hickok casts them in Jell-O to give them an ephemeral quality — the reality being that the city is much more rigid and physically stable. While Henry Hargreaves and Caitlin Levin sought to express the materiality in their ‘gingerbread museums,’ the fragility of the gelatin suggests that buildings and cities may be ephemeral after all.

© Liz Hickok

© Liz Hickok

The process is arduous: Each building must first be constructed as a mold made from a range of materials such as balsa wood, feathers, silicone rubber, and foamcore. (Once they’ve served their primary purpose, the molds become the subject of another of Hickok’s series.)

Read more articles by Matt

Is This the Light Switch of the Future?

As a respite from all the in-your-face robotics and high-tech fanfare going on at the Consumer Elect ronics Show, Architizer found one moment of Zen playing around with the ambient lighting options of Philips Hue Tap. The puck-like remote control syncs to Philips’ smart, color-changing Hue lights via ZigBee, a lower-energy, appliance-specific alternative to wi-fi that…

Sky-High Scandal: Viñoly’s Underwhelming Rooftop Garden Tops Off the Biggest Blight on London’s Skyline

20 Fenchurch Street — known by Londoners, not so affectionately, as the ‘Walkie-Talkie&r squo; — has ruffled more than a few feathers during its ungainly rise from the north bank of the Thames River. Its thuggish, lumbering form has been met with a tidal wave of derision from the U.K’s leading architecture critics, not to mention…

+