Showing posts with label Christo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christo. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Christo: Running Fence




Calvin Tomkins and David Bourdon
Christo: Running Fence, Sonoma and Marin Counties, California 1972-76
New York City, USA: Harry N Abrams, 1978
694 pp., 28.5 x 27 cm., hardcover
Edition of 2159 signed and numbered copies


Extensive documentation of the temporary installation by Christo, with photographs by Gianfranco Gorgoni, text by David Bourdon and a “Chronicle" by Calvin Tomkins. The book is signed and numbered and presented in a slipcase. 




Thursday, June 13, 2024

Christo

 















Christo was born on this day in 1935. 




Thursday, March 30, 2023

Christo | Wrapped Book Modern Art









Christo
Wrapped Book Modern Art
New York City, USA: brams Original Editions, 1978
34.5 x 25.4 x 4.4 cm.
Edition of 120 signed and numbered copies


The book Modern Art by Sam Hunter and John Jacobus, wrapped in transparent polyethylene with twine. Signed and numbered 27/120 in felt-tip pen and ink on the base verso. Valued at between $15 000 and $18 000. 



Friday, October 23, 2020

Christo | Look












Christo
Look
Cologne, Germany: Edition MAT/Galerie der Spiegel, 1964
56 x 45.6 x 8.2 cm
Edition of 100 signed and numbered copies


Christo first wrapped magazines in 1961, and his first multiple was a wrapped copy of the German magazine Der Spiegel. In 1963, he produced a large work containing various wrapped magazines, also titled Look

His second multiple was produced for Daniel Spoerri's Edition MAT and featured various copies of Look over sheets of foam, wrapped in polyethylene and cord, on a wooden support. 

Christo and his partner Jeanne-Claude has relocated to New York the year prior and Look magazine represented the essence of American consumerist culture. Headlines in the issues he selected included "The American Woman", "The Changing World of Japanese Women", "The Negro Now", "Catholic Revolution", "Flight from Dallas", "The Day JFK Died", and "Kennedy" (see below). 

When the works were shipped from New York to Karl Gertsner (who coedited Edition MAT MOT with artist Daniel Spoerri) in Cologne, customs agents unwrapped several, not recognizing them as artworks. 

In an undated letter to the artist from the Spoerri archives at the Swiss National library, Gertsner proposes adding the black wooden frame, so that the works might be read as "pictures" (Wrapped Der Spiegel had been designed to lay flat). This would also allow them to be mounted on the wall for a forthcoming Edition MAT exhibition that was being planned at the time. Perhaps most important to the publisher, mounting the works made them more marketable. The editions from the 64 series that were not hung proved more difficult to sell. 

Look initially sold for under $200. Recent auction prices today hover around $20,000.















Sunday, May 31, 2020

Christo | Wrapped Bouquet of Roses






Christo
Wrapped Bouquet of Roses
New York City, USA: Self-published, 1968
8.8 x 60.9 x 11.4 cm.
Edition of 75 signed and dated copies


Christo died at his home in New York City today, at age 84. His romantic and collaborative partner Jeanne-Claude died on November 18, 2009.





Thursday, June 13, 2019

Christo | Wrapped Books



Christo
Wrapped Books
New York City, USA: 1962
22.5 x 29.5 x 14cm
Unique work signed and dated 'Christo 62'

Christo turns 84 today. His partner and collaborator Jeanne-Claude died ten years ago, at the age of 74.

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Christo | Wrapped book Modern Art





Christo
Wrapped book Modern Art
New York City, USA: Abrams Original Editions, 1978
34.3 × 25.4 cm.
Edition of 120 signed and numbered copies [+20 AP]

Sam Hunter and John Jacobus's 1976 book Modern Art, wrapped by the artist in plastic with twine and cord. Examples at auction sell for approximately twelve to fifteen thousand US.

Friday, September 30, 2016

Christo | Wrapped 'Look' Magazine








Christo
Wrapped 'Look' Magazine 
Cologne, Germany: Edition MAT/Galerie der Spiegel, 1964
42 x 31cm.
Edition of 100 signed and numbered copies

A copy of Look magazine wrapped in plastic and rope, housed in a black wooden frame. Christo began wrapping magazines as early as 1961 and in 1963 completed a large wrapped work containing several copies of Look.

The handmade works were produced for Daniel Spoerri's Edition MAT, and sold for under $200. Recent auction prices for Wrapped 'Look' Magazine hover around $20,000.



Friday, June 3, 2016

Christo | Package





Christo
Package
New York City, USA: Fluxus, 1965
3 × 15.5 × 4"
Edition of 10 signed, numbered and dated copies

A plastic rose wrapped in polyethylene secured with string and staples, with a cardboard label attached. The above copy is in the Walker Art Centre Collection, a gift from Jon and Joanne Hendricks.

Letters from George Maciunas to Ben Vautier (and an issue of Vtre newspaper) list the work being included in copies of Fluxkit, but other than Christo's own copy this has not been verified. Christo wrapped several plastic flowers at the time, the Fluxus edition is distinguished by a Maciunas designed label that reads:

FROM:
CHRIS
TO:

presumably playing on the notion of gift 'wrapping'.

I conducted a phone interview with the artist years ago who confirmed his involvement with Fluxus was minimal, and that these works had been donated to the group as a fundraiser.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Magazine covers by artists #5: Christo and Jeanne-Claude


From Artvent, as part of an obituary to Jeanne-Claude:


My first contact with Christo and Jeanne-Claude was In 1989 when, as fine art consultant to TIME Magazine, I proposed commissioning Christo to do the cover of a special issue about the state of the environment: “The Planet of the Year: The Endangered Earth.”

But when I met with them, Christo said, “The idea is banal.”

Jeanne-Claude said, “Christo doesn’t do commissions.”

My deadline was the next Wednesday. “If you change your mind,” I told them, “you can call me at home any time.”

Jeanne-Claude called me at 7:00 Tuesday night. “Christo has an idea.”

The next morning, the art director, Rudy Hoglund, and I went to the studio, where Christo presented his plan to wrap a globe of the earth in semi-transparent plastic, tie it with twine, and photograph it on the sand at Jones Beach with the sun rising behind it. It was the perfect image: the earth bound and enshrouded in a claustrophobic film, with the sunrise a sign of optimism.

Leaving the studio we were walking on air, until Rudy asked me what I’d negotiated about the copyright.

Copyright? It was my first commission for TIME, and I had to admit I hadn’t considered it.

Hearing this, Rudy's face turned bright red and he started stomping up Broadway.

I spent the next weekend on the phone between Jeanne-Claude and TIME’s lawyer, working out the details of a contract that became TIME’s standard agreement with fine artists. In the process I learned a lot about copyright and also about the way Christo and Jeanne-Claude work.

I learned about their openness to possibility. Their decision to refuse all commissions was one that served them, but it didn’t blind them to the one situation that might be different.

I was impressed by their willingness to negotiate a solution that would maintain their integrity in the project without impeding it. It was a remarkable exercise in both flexibility and inflexibility that comes, not from ego, but from recognition of what’s really important.

After it was over, I received a post card that read simply “You were right,” signed: Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

So although the TIME Magazine cover was their smallest public project, it was also the one that reached the most people. And according to newsstand sales, one of the most popular TIME ever ran.

Their work illustrates that even with a minimalist, non-representational approach, high art need not be elite, that artistic rigor and public engagement can indeed go hand in hand. There’s a distinction to be made between work that seeks to be popular by pandering to existing perceptions of what art is, and art that transcends those expectations to create an event that becomes a vehicle for social and esthetic advancement.