February 11, 2005
Criticizing Christo
A day before Christo's project "The Gates" opens in Central Park, the critics are already doing, well, what they do. Jed Perl in The New Republic:
If Christo and Jeanne-Claude did not exist, somebody would have to invent them. The husband-and-wife team whose latest project, "The Gates," opens in New York's Central Park on Saturday, are the hardworking, irrepressible promoters of a series of avant-garde-meets-pop-culture happenings that sweep people right off their feet. This fusion phenomenon, with its mix of modernist obscurantism and feel-good communalism, is bohemianism for the masses. There isn't much of anything left once you've stripped these fun-with-fabric extravaganzas of all their logistical complexities. But the sheer bravado of Christo and Jeanne-Claude--who have wrapped buildings and coastlines--can pass for visionary power right now, when so many people are unclear as to where cultural experiences end and life-style choices begin. The acres of saffron cloth that Christo and Jeanne-Claude are unfurling across Central Park are a fashion statement, nothing more. It's public art for the cocooning generation. It's aestheticism lite.
More here.
Posted by Abbas Raza at 03:56 PM | Permalink
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Comments
I like this critique of "The Gates". It also brings to mind my reaction to the Sunday NYT magazine cover article about Heizer: "Michael Heizer, who has spent the past 32 years and many millions of mostly other people's dollars constructing ''City'' -- one of the biggest sculptures any modern artist has ever built, one and a quarter miles long and more than a quarter of a mile wide --". Now the valley of Heizer's planned City is threatened because the US Govt has plans to cut through it on the way to the nearby nuclear waste site by 2010. Heizer is beside himself " ... having also moved heaven and earth to build in isolation his immense sculpture, Heizer now finds the federal government is plotting, as he sees things, to ruin it and him." He plans to fight it tooth and nail, but please can we keep things in perspective? This is a self-indulgent art project! There may be other reasons for people living in the area to fight the idea of a nearby nuclear dumping ground but
Posted by: Sughra Raza | Feb 12, 2005 6:18:10 PM
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