Christo's 'Mastaba' artwork to grace London's Serpentine again – virtually

Viewers will be able to see Christo's enormous floating sculpture on their phones at Hyde Park in the British capital

(FILES) In this file photo taken on June 11, 2018 workers build 'The Mastaba', an outdoor work made up of over 7000 stacked barrels by Bulgarian artist Christo Vladimirov Javachef on the Serpentine lake in Hyde Park in London. The artist known as Christo, who made his name transforming landmarks such as Germany's Reichstag by covering them with reams of cloth, died on May 31, 2020 aged 84, his official Facebook page announced. Christo Vladimirov Javacheff died of natural causes at his home in New York City, the statement said. The Bulgarian-born artist worked in collaboration with his wife of 51 years Jeanne-Claude until her death in 2009. / AFP / Niklas HALLE'N
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Visitors to Hyde Park can now experience The London Mastaba, created by the artist Christo, in augmented reality on their mobile phones.

The London Mastaba was a temporary, colourful sculpture that floated on the Serpentine Lake for three months in 2018. Nearby was an exhibition of Christo's work that he undertook with his long-time artistic partner, Jeanne-Claude, who died in 2009.

Organisers said it was an opportunity to share the last piece of public work realised in Christo’s lifetime, before he passed away in May this year.

“Christo and Jeanne-Claude were truly extraordinary artists. Art for them was not a profession but their existence,” said Bettina Korek, the Serpentine Galleries’ chief executive, and Hans Ulrich Obrist, its artistic director.

“Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s genius exists in the transfer between the irrepressible ephemerality of their work and the indelible memories each project produced in everyone who experienced them. It is an honour to present this project as an everlasting, virtual translation of their otherworldly vision,” they added.

The virtual London Mastaba will be an exact replica of the physical structure installed in 2018. Organisers said it is best experienced from the north bank of the lake, opposite the Serpentine Lido. In conjunction with the Acute Art phone app, viewers will also be able to "place and interact with the piece" without the need to travel to London.

“The democratising power of new immersive media will bring Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s unique artistic vision to wide and diverse audiences across the globe. And it is always a joy to collaborate with the extraordinary team at the Serpentine Galleries,” Daniel Birnbaum, the artistic director of Acute Art, said.

The original London Mastaba was inspired by the ancient civilisations of Mesopotamia and was made up of 7,506 horizontally stacked barrels on a floating platform. It weighed more than 600 tonnes and covered roughly one per cent of the Serpentine Lake.