Christo has approval for his WILD new work, brace yourself for the Mastaba!
(Don’t make a joke out of that name please)
(Click the arrows to see the scale of this beast)

Guardian: He is an artist best known for wrapping the Reichstag in Berlin and for siting thousands of coloured umbrellas across valleys in Japan and America. Now Christo is creating for Abu Dhabi a colossal structure that he claims will be the world’s biggest permanent sculpture. Estimated construction costs of $340m (£212m) would also make it the world’s most expensive.

A 150-metre-high, flat-topped pyramid would be taller than St Paul’s Cathedral or St Peter’s Basilica and would overshadow the Great Pyramid of Giza – creating Abu Dhabi’s answer to Egypt’s pyramids or Mecca’s Kaaba.

The Mastaba, made out of 410,000 multicoloured oil barrels, is planned for what Christo describes as a “spectacularly beautiful” desert landscape, Al Gharbia, 100 miles from Abu Dhabi city.

Speaking to the Observer, Christo said a site near Liwa oasis has been approved. The region boasts some of the world’s highest dunes, with gazelles among the wildlife. Stacked barrels painted in colours inspired by the yellow and red sands will recreate the visual effect of an Islamic mosaic, he said: “When the sun rises, the vertical wall will become almost full of gold.”

It is a project that he first envisaged in a series of drawings more than 30 years ago with his wife, Jeanne-Claude, who died in 2009. But the Iran-Iraq war was among factors delaying plans. Christo revived them after being inspired by Abu Dhabi’s bid to turn itself into a cultural oasis in the Middle East – notably, the Louvre Museum in Paris opening an outpost, and British architect Norman Foster designing the Zayed National Museum.

He is collaborating on the project with Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed al-Nahyan, representative of the crown prince, his elder brother. He first had to convince the royal family – “and now they’re very excited to realise the project,” he said.

He claims that it is financed “independently”, through sales of his works for up to $10m and “different investors”. He refused to elaborate. Asked whether the country’s ruling family are among the investors, he said: “We cannot say more. They own the land.”

Christo, born Christo Javacheff, is a Bulgarian-born American who started as a social realist painter before devoting himself to wrapping everyday objects from bottles to chairs in sheets or tarpaulin. One story claims porters at an auction house failed to appreciate that the paper wrapping they removed from a chair was in fact a Christo sculpture.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude eventually moved on to temporary larger-than-life wrappings, suspending a curtain across a Colorado valley and covering the Pont Neuf in Paris.

The Mastaba will be their only permanent large-scale work. Christo emphasised that it is not a pyramid. The name and geometrical form are inspired by an ancient Mesopotamian mud bench for desert travellers to rest.

He denied that using oil barrels as artistic material was a commentary on the region’s oil, pointing out that they feature in previous works, including his 1960s Iron Curtain, in which he blocked off a Paris street with oil drums.

In a book titled The Mastaba, Project for Abu Dhabi, which Christo published this month, he makes clear that none of his ideas are born of economic or political events. He recalls the words of Jeanne-Claude: “We only do works of joy and beauty.”

He told the Observer that he wants to create a sculpture that is “deeply rooted” in the great tradition of Islamic architecture: “When Louis XIV was building that kitschy castle Versailles, the greatest architecture in the Middle East had incredible simplicity … and play with colours.”

He said that the Mastaba’s construction will take 30 months and involve hundreds of people. A German company that produces the colours for Mercedes-Benz and BMW cars will create colours for the barrels. Nearby, an “art campus” with an exhibition about the project, as well as a luxury hotel and restaurant, will also be built. He commissioned a report that suggests that up to 2 million visitors a year will come. Whether that level can be achieved remains to be seen.

Anyone else the tinest bit bummed that it’s hollow?

Christo directing work 1969
Wrapped Coast
One Million Square Feet, Little Bay, Sydney, Australia, 1968-69 
Photos: Harry Shunk (Click the arrows for more)

Here’s a rarely seen television interview from 1971, I love the chick’s voice narrating it

Wrapped Portrait of Jeanne-Claude 196330 7/8 x 20 1/8 x 2” (78.5 x 51.2 x 5 cm)Oil on canvas portrait by Christo Javacheff, wrapped with polyethylene and rope by Christo, mounted on black wooden board

Christo and Jeanne-Claude at Galleria La Salita, Rome, with Wrapped Shoes 1963

Wrapped Motorcycle 196238 1/4 x 67 x 19 5/8” (97 x 170 x 50 cm)Polyethylene, rope and motorcycle

Christo with Wrapped Car (Volkswagen), 1963

Wrapped Magazines 196215 x 12 x 2” (38 x 30 x 5 cm)Polyethelene, rope, cord and magazines
Christo & Jeanne Claude have a fantastic new website with a heap of great high resolution photos of all their works. I love these early wrapped objects, and some of the ideas in the Projects not Realised section look wild, go have a look.

Wrapped Portrait of Jeanne-Claude 1963
30 7/8 x 20 1/8 x 2” (78.5 x 51.2 x 5 cm)
Oil on canvas portrait by Christo Javacheff, wrapped with polyethylene and rope by Christo, mounted on black wooden board

Christo and Jeanne-Claude at Galleria La Salita, Rome, with Wrapped Shoes 1963

Wrapped Motorcycle 1962
38 1/4 x 67 x 19 5/8” (97 x 170 x 50 cm)
Polyethylene, rope and motorcycle

Christo with Wrapped Car (Volkswagen), 1963

Wrapped Magazines 1962
15 x 12 x 2” (38 x 30 x 5 cm)
Polyethelene, rope, cord and magazines

Christo & Jeanne Claude have a fantastic new website with a heap of great high resolution photos of all their works. I love these early wrapped objects, and some of the ideas in the Projects not Realised section look wild, go have a look.

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Christo

Art

Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s ‘Over The River’ project has been approved.

ArchDaily: This will allow the world famous artist to temporarily suspend 5.9 miles of silvery, luminous fabric panels high above the Arkansas River, along a 42-mile stretch between Salida and Cañon City in south-central Colorado. After remaining on the drawing boards for 20 years, the Over The River installation plans to begin in early 2014 with an exhibition planned for August 2015.

Christo: “The Fremont County permit is essential to realizing this temporary work of art that Jeanne-Claude and I first envisioned nearly 20 years ago, I am very pleased that the Commissioners have voted to approve this public work of art for Fremont County, and I want to thank them for their hard work and efforts in evaluating our application. I am glad to be moving forward with our plans to complete Over The River.

(Source:AD)

This is the radical Maysles doco on Christo’s Valley curtain.
click for part two and click for part three







Christo & Jeanne Claude’s Wrapped Coast (One Million Square Feet)
Little Bay, Sydney, Australia 1968-69

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ART

Christo

I watched the great Maysles doco on Christo & Jeanne Claude’s Gates last night too. You just want to strangle the misguided folks in the 70s who block it. Some of the insane things they say make the mind boggle. I knew about the covered river project in Colorado, but I just found this on their webiste, The Mastaba Project for the United Arab Emirates. 410,000 oil barrels. Hope he can crack this.

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ART

CHRISTO

Cool talk by Christo from earlier 2010, mostly about his upcoming works


These Christo and Jeanne Claude dudes are simply just the world’s biggest rulers!
This is called The Wall and consists of 13 000 oil drums in Gasometer, Oberhausen, Germany, 1998-99.

These Christo and Jeanne Claude dudes are simply just the world’s biggest rulers!

This is called The Wall and consists of 13 000 oil drums in Gasometer, Oberhausen, Germany, 1998-99.

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ART

CHRISTO