Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Night Gates


In the February 28, 2005 issue of The New Yorker, Peter Schjeldahl writes that Christo and Jeanne-Claude's "The Gates" project offers little aesthetic value. Excepting fleeting seconds of "beauty" when the late afternoon sun backlit the orange hangings, Schjeldahl finds the work "charm-free, synthetic...something you would wear only in the woods during deer season."

The critic does, however, notice a "drowsy contentment" on the faces of his fellow Central Park visitors and he "give[s himself] a nice scare imagining 'The Gates' magically removed, and leaving the people looking as they looked - a goofball 'Night of the Living Dead.'"

If I consider only my daytime "Gates" experience, I agree with Schjeldahl, but my “Night of the Living Dead” moment occurred, appropriately enough, at night. After dark, the sunny backlight Schjeldahl describes is similarly effected by bright spotlights and park lamps.

On the second Saturday night of the installation, gusting wind worked in combination with the lighting to create an eerie, magical feel, one augmented by the relative emptiness of the park and the three glasses of red wine I'd just consumed.

Photo credit: Hungry Hyaena, 2005

1 comment:

Hungry Hyaena said...

While I'd prefer for the random epithets to be kept to a minimum, I always like to see feedback.

I must point out, though, that I did not imply an overall dissatisfaction with "The Gates." I merely stated that I feel they were most successful at night.