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The Gates, Project for Central Park, New York
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Christo, The Gates, Project for Central Park, New York, 2003. Pencil, charcoal, pastel, wax crayon, enamel paint, fabric sample, hand-drawn map, technical data and tape, sheet (1): 96 x 15 inches; sheet (2): 96 x 42 inches. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Purchased with funds contributed by Peter B. Lewis, 2004. 2004.102.




For over three decades, husband and wife collaborators Christo and Jeanne-Claude have orchestrated large-scale interventions in both the man-made and natural environments, from wrapping such architectural landmarks as the Pont Neuf in Paris and the Reichstag in Berlin in fabric, to erecting a twenty-four-mile fence of nylon through California's Sonoma and Marin counties. While monumental in scale and ambition, these projects undermine the notion of the solitary, heroic artistic genius; they are temporary, leaving no permanent mark on the sites, and their existence is owed to the collective efforts of hundreds of workers. Christo and Jeanne-Claude typically engage in lengthy campaigns to persuade myriad public-interest groups, private landowners, and municipal and state authorities in order to win permission for their projects. This social process is central to their work; the pair proposes a fundamentally democratic vision of art, one that moves beyond the walls of the museum and into the space of the community to engage the widest possible audience.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude's most recent project, The Gates, transformed New York's Central Park with 7,500 gateways clad with saffron-colored synthetic fabric, covering twenty-three miles of park walkways. Originally conceived in 1979, the installation was granted permission by the city in 2003, and was on view for sixteen days in February 2005. This drawing is one of a number of preparatory studies that Christo created for The Gates, as he has done for all past projects. These studies are integral tools in Christo and Jean-Claude's lobbying efforts, allowing others to visualize the proposals. The proceeds from the sales of these works also provide the resources with which the artists finance the actual installations, allowing them to forswear all public or private funding. At the same time, such drawings and collages constitute finished works in their own right, revealing consummate draftsmanship and uncanny imagination.

–Ted Mann