
Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Christo, Javacheff Christo, Wrapped Trees, Switzerland (Hand Signed by Christo and Jeanne-Claude), 1998
Christo (Christo and Jeanne Claude)
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ALPHA 137 GALLERY
ALPHA 137 GALLERY
Christo, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Javacheff Christo
The Gates, New York City (two separate cards, each hand signed in ink), 2005
Two offset lithograph postcards, each hand signed in black ink, from the collection of Herb Nass
Signed by hand twice: signed in black ink on the bottom of each of the cards (see photos and close up photos)
Frame included
Measurements:
Framed
12.5 inches by 15.5 inches by 1 inch
Postcards floated side by side:
7.5 by 9.5
Two separate hand signed postcards (each is signed) of The Gates, gifted by Christo to Herb Nass, famous artist estate attorney, and author of the book "Wills of the Rich and Famous".
Acquired from Herb Nass' collection. The works are floated and framed in a black frame.
Christo's "The Gates" in New York City, 26 years in the making, and installed in Central Park in 2005 was a brilliant move by the Bloomberg administration to revitalize the morale and the economy of a city that had been devastated by the September 11th 2001 terrorist attacks.
Description of "The Gates" project from the Bloomberg CityLab:
"...On February 12, 2005, Christo and Jeanne-Claude debuted The Gates, a spectacle the likes of which New York had never seen. Over 23 miles of walking paths through Central Park, the artists erected 7,503 gates, each one supporting a fabric flag suspended like a curtain. The gates were each 16 feet tall, giving the project the feeling of major infrastructure. Painted in public-works-department orange, the gates were unmistakably civic in nature.
The artists said that they drew some inspiration for The Gates from the torii gates that line the way to the Fushimi Inari Shrine in Kyoto and other Shinto shrines in Japan. People purchase those gates as an offering for prosperity. The Gates certainly did the job for New York. The installation drew millions of visitors to the city and generated an estimated $254 million for the local economy. That’s orders of magnitude more than the highest estimate of its cost: $21 million, which paid for 5,000 tons of steel, 1 million square feet of fabric, and thousands of hours of labor from workers. The Gates was a coup for New York. The artists’ sweeping gesture came at a time when the city was still reeling from the attacks of September 11, 2001. The Gates was less an act of healing than an expression of resolve. New Yorkers came together for a public demonstration whose meaning was wide open (and the topic of every conversation). In an era before Instagram or smartphones, it was a live civic spectacle, proof that a vision could serve as a beacon to the public commons. On brisk winter days, the gates fluttered like flags. People rallied around them. Witnessing the gates as a visitor felt peaceful — even underwhelming. It was supposed to be.."
Provenance
Collection of Herb Nass, renowned estate attorney and friend of the artists