
Major artistic figure
For art historians and the broader public alike, the matter is settled: Christo ranks among the defining artistic figures of the second half of the twentieth century. Yet does the inherently public nature of his creations inevitably condemn his work to disappearance once the installations are dismantled? “No,” replies his nephew Vladimir Yavachev emphatically. Having spent thirty-six years helping realize the artist’s projects, he now deploys extraordinary imagination to keep Christo “alive.”
financial autonomy

From the Pont Neuf in Paris to the Arkansas River in Colorado, the Bulgarian-born artist, who had lived in New York City since 1964, invented an entirely new artistic universe — a radically original way of creating oversized forms by integrating them into public spaces on the scale of architecture and vast natural landscapes. Less well known, however, is the extent of his inventiveness beyond the installations themselves.
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Determined never to depend financially on the authorities hosting his projects, he devised a system that guaranteed him complete autonomy: throughout his life, he produced and sold drawings and relief works documenting each project. His method — a kind of crowdfunding before its time, with contributors systematically receiving an artwork in return — was even studied at Harvard University.
joint authorship

Christo died on May 31, 2020, at the age of eighty-four, following the death in 2009 of his French wife Jeanne-Claude, the indispensable force behind all the projects they traditionally signed together. That insistence on joint authorship reflected yet another innovation from this extraordinarily creative couple, worlds away from the conventional image of the silent muse standing behind the master.
VLADIMIR YAVACHEV
Today, the maestro’s nephew, Vladimir Yavachev — a towering Bulgarian with a gravelly voice — is multiplying initiatives on behalf of the American foundation devoted to Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Wasn’t he also the one who oversaw the realization of the Arc de Triomphe Wrapped in 2021? “I perform no miracles,” he says. “I’m simply the foundation’s project director. It is Christo, the artist, who still performs miracles.”
It is no coincidence, for instance, that in October 2025 the square on the Pont Neuf facing the equestrian statue of Henry IV of France was renamed Place Christo et Jeanne-Claude, in homage to the couple’s masterful wrapping of the bridge in 1985.

Christo’s works also remain strongly represented in the upper echelons of the art market. In June 2025, for example, a historic 1961 Volkswagen Beetle wrapped by the artist was unveiled at Art Basel. Then, in February 2026, an entire booth was devoted to him at the inaugural Art Basel Qatar.
gagosian
Meanwhile in London, Gagosian gallery is exhibiting through August 21 a monumental installation by Christo: a ceiling-mounted inflatable structure conceived in 1965 whose ambition is to sculpt the most intangible of materials — air itself.
la caverne du pont neuf
And of course, Vladimir Yavachev, deeply attached to commemorative anniversaries, recently suggested — albeit with slight delay — that the French street artist JR commemorate the wrapping of the Pont Neuf. From June 6 to June 28 2026, the project will take the form of La Caverne du Pont Neuf: 2,400 square meters of fabric creating the trompe-l’oeil illusion of a cave while once again enveloping, forty-one years later, Paris’s oldest bridge. It has to be said that the printed fake cave gives the project a somewhat tacky aesthetic. A subtler approach, more in keeping with Christo’s spirit, would have been appreciated.
ABU DHABI
Finally, Vladimir Yavachev is working relentlessly to realize the couple’s great permanent work: the The Mastaba in Abu Dhabi — a colossal pyramid rising 250 meters high in the desert, composed of 410,000 stacked oil barrels.
“I was in Abu Dhabi last week. I’m very optimistic,” Vladimir Yavachev concludes, before adding: “We are here to fulfill the wishes of Christo and Jeanne-Claude, who wanted certain projects to be completed after them.”

In June, the publisher Just an Idea is releasing a book of beautiful photographs of Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s studio, taken by Marc Azoulay shortly after Christo’s death. A signing will be held on June 12 in Paris, at Galerie Les Cahiers d’Art.



