
Although a little delayed, I figured that I would write a review on The Gates that caused some controversy back in February...
Basic Info: Artist's name: Christo and Jeanne-Claude
Title: The Gates
Dates: February 12th through the 26th 2005
Location: Central Park in NYC
Media: 7,532 16foot high frames from which hang rectangles of heavy saffron-colored nylon fabric.
The idea for The Gates first came to creators, Christo and Jeanne-Claude in the year 1979, during a period when many artists were working directly with the landscape. They both desired a location which could turn nature into theater. They eventually found that Central Park in New York City, which lay deep in the heart of a city of towers and outlandish gestures, would be the ideal "stage" setting.
It has taken Christo and Jeanne-Claude twenty-six years of planning, fundraising, and proposing in order to have their ideas come to life. Finally, on January 22nd of 2003, the major of New York City, Michael R. Bloomberg, announced that a permit would be signed to allow Christo and Jeanne-Claude to begin constructing their fabrication. In the twenty-three miles of walkway they have placed around 7500 sixteen foot frames which each hold a rectangular piece of saffron colored nylon fabric which flows freely with the wind.
The Gates have been described as a series of pictures with its endless spectators occupying that lower halves of each individual gate. The installation allows common, everyday individuals to become part of a piece of artwork in a small way. Most New Yorkers seem to appreciate The Gates for the right reasons. Mainly the color and excitement of it all has brought a light into the common February gloom. It has also made many of its viewers more conscious of the parks serpentine design and perhaps even more aware of the park's genius designer, Mr. Frederick Law Olmstead.
Although The Gates was put up for only sixteen days, I believe that the effects of this piece of artwork had a number of different individuals will stay with them for a long time. Although The Gates is a triumph in and of itself for conceptual installation art, I believe that that twenty-one million dollars spent to produce this project could have been put towards a far nobler cause. Considering the overwhelming amount of devastation existing in this world with world hunger and war, I am sorry but money like this should be put toward something more substantial then decorating a public parkway for sixteen days.
For a humorus viewpoint of this artwork please check out this site and watch the video...

permalink: http://estrip.org/articles/aswierat/20744.html
Words: 479 -- Depew, NY










