jueves, 6 de octubre de 2022

CHRISTO / LITOGRAFÍAS FIRMADAS A MANO.

Litografías  firmadas por Christo.

Cuadro con marco aprox.39 x 50 cm.



Wrapped Reichstag, Project for Berlin, 1994

Hand-signed by artist, Hand signed in crayon by Christo. Verso bears title, copyright and publishers namp stamp Schumacher Edition Fils

Mixed media collage with raised silver thermal paper - an actual piece of the wrapping. Hand signed in crayon. 
15 1/2 × 11 3/4 in
39.4 × 29.8 cm
Edition of 100


This limited edition signed mixed media print features the raised silver thermal paper/fabric used to wrap the Reichstag, and it was created in 1994 to raise funds for Christo's iconic Wrapped Reichstag project (1986–1994).  There were several signed lithographs of different images of the wrapped Reichstag published to raise funds for this event; however, limited edition hand signed prints like this, with the raised silver thermal paper, are the most collectible. Although this particular work is unnumbered, it is said to have been published in an edition of about 100.
The project to wrap the German Parliament building was conceived by Christo and his wife Jeanne-Claude in the early 1970s, but was not realized until the 1990s. The structure was wrapped in polypropylene fabric, with 17,060 yards of bright blue rope holding it tight against the 220 tons of steel structure to which the wrapping was attached. A New York Times feature on the project described it as follows: "Wrapped Reichstag, by Christo and his wife, Jeanne-Claude, is at once a work of art, a cultural event, a political happening and an ambitious piece of business. It has got Berlin into more of a celebratory mood than anything since the fall of the wall .... and as the immense project of wrapping the 101-year-old German Parliament building in more than a million square feet of aluminum-colored fabric nears its completion, crowds gather day and night to gawk, to cheer as sections of cloth are unfurled, and to watch for glimpses of the New York artist couple who are treated here like rock stars."  Paul Goldberger, who wrote the Times feature, describes the cultural, as well as aesthetic impact of wrapping the Reichstag at that moment in history. "This immense stone hulk, a heavy, bombastic building that epitomizes German excesses of the late 19th century, is rendered light, almost delicate. It takes on an ethereal beauty, and looks as if it could float away into the silvery, cloudy Berlin sky."  Decades later, Christo, would reflect on the fact that the New York Times dispatched their architecture critic, Paul Goldberger, to review the project - instead of their esteemed art reviewer, because in those years, Christo's work was not considered art, and perhaps they didn't know quite what it was!





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