The Independent
It has been 12 years in conception, but the Bulgarian artist's vision for Central Park is ready to be unveiled. By David Usborne
06 January 2005
In a cold winter rain yesterday, an army of New York City workers were using fork lifts to place thousands of specially designed steel bases along 23 miles (37km) of footpaths in Central Park in preparation for an extravagant new outdoor exhibit conceived by the artist Christo and his wife, Jeanne-Claude.
Into the steel bases will eventually slot vinyl poles that will give form to no fewer than 7,500 gates. On 12 February, the entire creation will come to life when curtains of saffron-coloured cloth will be unfurled from the top of each gate to hang 7 feet (about 2.1m) above the ground.
The completed installation will be the culmination of 25 years of effort by Christo, who is Bulgarian, and his French wife to bring their inspiration to the world's most famous park. Requests for permits to use Central Park were rebuffed in 1979 and it was only after Michael Bloomberg became mayor that the city acquiesced.
For two weeks in February, residents of the city and tourists will be able to follow the course of the gates, which from above will resemble a giant serpent threaded through the park. The artists, who are perhaps most famous for wrapping world monuments such as the Pont Neuf in Paris and the Berlin Reichstag, said they had chosen February because the leafless trees would make for better viewing of their work.
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=598146