The National Gallery of Art
in Washington, D.C., featured a show on "minimalism," in which
sometimes quite ordinary objects are offered as art. Included, for
example, was a wrapped package, in brown paper and string, entitled
"Package," by Christo. According to the
Washington Post,
when gallery technician Glenn Perry was installing some of the
exhibits with the aid of his tool cart, "several patrons and
critics" gathered around the cart and studied it, as if it were an
exhibit, before Perry finished his work and rolled the cart away.
[Ed.: Christo is famous for "wrapping" large structures such as
buildings with fabric, and for constructing gigantic umbrellas in the
California desert. A Japanese tourist was killed when one of these
umbrellas broke free during a period of high winds, offering yet
another reason to stay away from modern art.]
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