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New York unfurls ‘The Gates’

With flowing fabric the color of a sunrise, “The Gates” — a massive public art installation in Central Park — was unfurled Saturday for the start of a 16-day stay transforming miles of footpaths in Central Park.
USA NEW YORK CHRISTO GATES
A man cycles through artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude's "The Gates" art exhibit in Central Park, New York on Saturday. The installation, which will remain up for 16 days, covers 23 miles of paved path in the park. Andrew Gombert / EPA via Sipa Press
/ Source: msnbc.com news services

“The Gates” are open — all 7,500 of ’em.

The biggest art project in New York City’s history debuted Saturday in Central Park with the unfurling of saffron-colored fabric banners suspended in 16-foot-high frames, providing a splash of sunrise 26 years in the making.

“I came for this. It’s poetry in motion. It’s for the moment — a kind of Zen,” said Barbara Knorr, a German-speaking visitor who came from Switzerland just to see the exhibit created by Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

'A visual golden river'
“The Gates” is the pair’s first major project in New York City. It features 7,500 frames with their hanging orange-tinted fabric, creating what the artists billed as “a visual golden river” along 23 miles of footpaths in the park.

Knorr took in the sight from the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which offered a panoramic view of lines of the wind-blown banners snaking through the trees in the park below.

Mixed reviews
Everyone, it seemed, had an opinion.

“It’s art,” pronounced 8-year-old Mikaela Simon, of Shiloh, N.J., as she sketched the scene in a notebook on the museum roof.

Thea Stone said the artists “created a temple in the park; it’s become like a holy place to walk.”

A 36-year-old portfolio manager who asked not to be named said the best part was that it was privately funded. “But it’s not art. It’s just a neat, man-made thing,” he said.

A regular bicyclist and roller-blader, the portfolio manager said the Gates would not cause him much more than the usual trouble with unwary pedestrians.

Central Park bird-watchers were split on the project. “I can’t see how it will be a problem,” Rebekah Creshkoff said. But Marie Winn wrote on her Web site: “It doesn’t seem likely that the impact will be a favorable one.”

People-watching was part of the pleasure for Magen Banwart, a 35-year-old fitness instructor who worked on the project.

“The biggest thing is that this is public art, and the most unique opportunity in my life to watch other people experience public art and watch children learn public art in this city.”

The 16-day exhibit was expected to lure tens of thousands of art lovers and the merely curious to Manhattan.

It opened with cheers as Mayor Michael Bloomberg raised a hooked baton to pull a tab and release the first swatch of fabric from a sleeve at the top of a gate. A class of fourth-graders counted down the seconds.

By noon, more than 1 million square feet of fabric had been freed to flap in the stiff breeze.

26 years in the making
The work’s official title — “The Gates, Central Park, New York, 1979-2005” — refers to the artists’ conception of the project 26 years ago. The Parks Department rejected the idea in 1981. They are paying for the project themselves and estimate the cost could total as much $21 million.

“I can’t promise, particularly since this is New York, that everyone will love ’The Gates,’ but I guarantee that they will all talk about it,” Bloomberg said Friday. “And that’s really what innovative, provocative art is supposed to do.”

Christo and Jeanne-Claude were reticent to discuss their creation.

“It’s very difficult,” explained Christo. “You ask us to talk. This project is not involving talk. It’s a real, physical space. It’s not necessary to talk. You spend time, you experience the project.”

Ambitious artists
Their previous projects included “Wrapped Reichstag,” which wrapped the German parliament building in Berlin in silvery fabric in 1995, and for “The Umbrellas” of 1991, with 3,100 large umbrellas opened in valleys of California and Japan.

Whether “The Gates” is deemed art or not, the work accomplished no small feat: It nudged thousands of New Yorkers out of bed on a freezing Saturday morning.

Ali Naqui had to be dragged to the unveiling by his fiancee, but then was smiling by the time he joined the crowd. “It’s a bit insane, but that’s why everybody is here,” he said.

One New York fourth-grader had her own art critique.

“It’s a waste of money, but it’s fabulous,” said Shakana Jayson. “It brings happiness when you look at it.”