Christo, Arc de Triomphe 1962/2021

Christo, Arc de Triomphe 1962/2021

Friday, Sep 17, 2021

Planned by the conceptual artist 60 years ago, the posthumous work transforms a great monument with a glistening cloak. It feels like a liberating moment for the city... 

PARIS — For almost 60 years, the artist known as Christo dreamed of wrapping the Arc de Triomphe. As a young man, having fled communist Bulgaria, he would gaze at the monument from his tiny garret apartment. A photomontage dated 1962 shows the 164-foot-high arch crudely bundled up. Freedom trumped the sacred. He always wanted people to look again at what perhaps they did not see.

Now, a little over a year after Christo’s death at the age of 84, “L’Arc de Triomphe, Wrapped” is a reality. Some 270,000 square feet of silvery blue fabric, shimmering in the changing light of Paris, hugs the monument commissioned by Napoleon in 1806 at the giddy height of his power. The polypropylene material, its tone reminiscent of the city’s distinctive zinc roofs, is secured but not held rigidly fast by almost 1.9 miles of red rope, in line with the artist’s meticulous instructions..." Extract: Coen, Roger, New York Times, Sept 17 2021. Cover photograph: 2019 Estate of Christo Javechef;  The Guardian Sun 13 June 2021

Read full NYT article here

See L'Arc de Triomphe working drawings and the artist in action here; Christo y Jeanne Claude website.