Cool Hunting

The Gates by Josh Rubin

Christos Gates Pano

7500 steel gates with nylon flags, 16 feet tall, 23 miles long, 26 years in the making, $20 million, on view for 16 days.

My first glimpse of The Gates, Jeanne-Claude and Christo's Central Park installation that opened today in New York was from the top of an apartment building on the South-East side of the park. The orange flags looked like dominoes lining the 23 miles of sidewalks, highlighting the curves that make Central Park an oasis in the grid of Manhattan. I then went downstairs, and despite the throngs of people, enjoyed the installation even more. It's a much more elegant and harmonious work than their shocking pink islands I experienced as a kid in Miami.

If you're in NYC, be sure to check it out. But hurry, there are only 15 days left.

More pictures after the jump.

Img2005-02-12-0014

Img2005-02-12-0005

Img2005-02-12-0006

Img2005-02-12-0008

Img2005-02-12-0026

Img2005-02-12-0030

*do not reuse any of these images without photographic credit to Josh Rubin.

Want to see The Gates from even further above? Check out this satellite image. Thanks, Craig!

Continue reading
Tools
Print
Email
Save / Bookmark
fShare Share
Permanent link
Sphere It
This entry posted on 12 February 2005 at 7:00 PM
Related Entries
Advertisement
Bicycle Film Festival: Joy Ride Art Shows
Now in its ninth year, the Bicycle Film Festival is bigger than ever in 2009, hitting up 39 cities worldwide and including a blowout bicycle-inspired art show called Joy Ride. Before traveling to five other major cities with the festival, four venues will host the show throughout NYC's Lower East Side and Soho neighborhoods starting next week. A group exhibition in collaboration with Anonymous...
Sofia Maldonado: Skate My Patria
by Tamara Warren Brooklyn-based artist Sofia Maldonado sees the world from the point of a 32-inch deck on four wheels, exploring the counter culture surrounding skateboards in much of her work. The muralist and painter transforms abandoned swimming pools into fantastical oases that serve as bowls for masterful tricks and reconfigures banal plywood ramps with interconnected shapes. Her imagery documents the rebellious spirit of the...
Héctor Zamora: Sciame di Dirigibili
The installation "Sciame di Dirigibili" by Mexico-born, Brazilian resident Héctor Zamora is jump-starting the exciting kickoff of the six-month-long 53rd Venice Biennale, offering us a glimpse at what will have festival-goers remembering the event for biennials to come. Zamora wedged a life-size zeppelin between buildings at the Arsenale—where a majority of the events take place—saluting the former era of air balloon festivals that captivated...
Jonathan Schipper: Irreversibility
With his high-concept mechanics, artist Jonathan Schipper's latest exhibition, "Irreversibility," is just as stunningly clever as the animatronic sculpture we watched him build a few years ago. Held at Brooklyn's Pierogi Gallery, the show is both a spectacle and showcase of recent sculptures and installations by Schipper, including "The Slow Inevitable Death of American Muscle," (pictured above) in which a live, head-on collision takes...
Recent Cool Hunting Videosview all Cool Hunting Videos
Advertisement
Advertisement
Recent Entries

J. Howells Werthman: We Are Making Plans


PhoneSuit MiLi Pro Video Projector


iPhone HP Calculators


Society6


Bedol Eco-Friendly Water Drop Clock


Context x Kicking Mule 1980 Hand Dye Jeans


Liquid Image Camera Goggles


Interview with Erik Madigan Heck of Nomenus Quarterly


Photographer Julia Fullerton-Batten