Inaugurated on September 18 2021 and visible until October 3 2021, entering the terrace of the monument, the
"Arc de Triomphe empaqueté" is the posthumous work of recently disappeared artists
Christo and
Jeanne-Claude,
both of whom have marked the history of contemporary art. It is one of the most famous and scenic projects of Christo,
the undisputed father of Land Art and the "packaging" of iconic architecture and monuments is its stylistic signature. Covered with
25,000 square meters of recyclable fabric in silver polypropylene - blue and 3000 meters of red recyclable ropes, the preparatory work of the
Arc de Triomphe began in July with the assembly of the scaffolding from which, Sunday, September 12, the first polypropylene drapes encircling the Napoleonic Arch have been developed. As the artist’s intentions dictate,
the visitor can interact with the shimmering fabric that covers the entire Arch, touch it but also trample on it. The
idea of the project was born in the
early '60s when both Christo and his wife Jeanne Claude lived in Paris and only in 2019 the artist, shortly before he died, had managed
to obtain permission for the coverage of the Arc de Triomphe and wanted to "sign" in Paris his last work,
after the radical act of 1985 when he packed the Pont-Neuf on the Seine.The packaged
Arc de Triomphe is "like a living object that will come alive in the wind reflecting light. The folds will move, the surface of the monument will become sensual" explained Christo presenting the project. "He wanted to complete this project. He made us promise that we would do it," says
Christo’s nephew Vladimir Yavachev,
curator of the exhibition. The
EUR 14 million project is financed through
the sale of preparatory studies, drawings, scale models and other works by Christo and the installation was planned for last autumn but was delayed by the pandemic from Covid-19.