Credited with the invention of the mobile, Alexander Calder
revolutionized twentieth-century art with his innovative
use of subtle air currents to animate sculpture. An
accomplished painter of gouaches and sculptor in a variety
of media, Calder is best known for poetic arrangements of
boldly colored, irregularly shaped geometric forms that convey
a sense of harmony and balance.
Calder was born in a suburb of Philadelphia to a family
of artists. His grandfather, Alexander Milne Calder,
and father, Alexander Stirling Calder, created sculptures
and public monuments, and his mother was a painter. Accustomed
to traveling in pursuit of public art commissions, the family
moved to Pasadena, California, in 1906. The new environment—with
its expansive night sky studded with brilliant planets and
stars—fascinated the young Calder. These cosmic
forms strongly influenced the structure and iconography of
his future work.
At a young age, Calder began using tools and found materials
to create various structures and inventions. This constructive
impulse led him to attend the Stevens Institute of Technology,
where he received a degree in mechanical engineering in 1919. Yet
by 1922 he had abandoned his new career. After a stint
as a seaman, Calder began formal art study at the Art Students
League in New York in 1923. During this period, Calder
worked as a freelance illustrator and often visited zoos
and circuses to sketch.
Calder moved to Paris in 1926, and during his seven-year
stay he delighted fellow artists including Man Ray, Joan
Miró, Fernand Léger, Le Corbusier and Piet
Mondrian and attracted the attention of art patrons with
his whimsical wire figures and portrait heads. Most
notably, he created small sculptures of circus animals and
performers with movable parts and developed and toured a
performance/demonstration dubbed the “Cirque Calder.” This
series culminated in the completion of his most celebrated
piece, Circus (1932, Whitney Museum of American
Art).
Calder’s use of irregular, biomorphic forms that recall
the work of Miró reflected the influence of Surrealism
and Dada, but it was the art and concepts of Mondrian that
would have the most decisive impact on Calder’s work. Calder
visited Mondrian’s studio in 1930 and later described
how the experience transformed his understanding of abstract
art. He wrote, “This one visit gave me a shock
that started things. Though I had often heard the word ‘modern’ before,
I did not consciously know or feel the term ‘abstract.’ So
now at thirty-two, I wanted to paint and work in the abstract.” (1) Shortly
thereafter, Calder was invited to join the international
Abstraction-Création group that included Mondrian,
Theo van Doesburg, Robert and Sonia Delaunay, Jean Arp, and
many other artists working with geometric abstract forms.
Calder was impressed by Mondrian’s reduction of visual
imagery to a vocabulary of flat planes of primary colors. He
suggested that Mondrian consider adding movement to the forms. Mondrian
rejected the idea, stating “my painting is already
very fast.” (2) Calder soon took his own advice
and began experimenting with movement in his work. At
first, he drew on his mechanical training to devise cranks
and motors that would produce kinetic effects. The
following year, Calder exhibited these new pieces, christened “mobiles” by
Marcel Duchamp, as well as non-moving wire abstractions termed “stabiles” by
Jean Arp. By 1932 Calder realized that ambient air
currents were strong enough to move lightweight sculptures,
and he abandoned prescribed patterns of movement for more
spontaneous rhythms.
In 1933, Calder reestablished his home base in the United
States, on a farm in Roxbury, Connecticut. The years
from this point to the late 1950s were the most varied and
prolific of Calder’s career. As he emerged as
an artist of international stature, with a mid-career retrospective
at the Museum of Modern Art in 1943, Calder continued to
make mobiles (hanging and standing) and stabiles made out
of sheet metal, as well as paintings, jewelry, and set designs
for performances by Martha Graham, Eric Satie, and others.
When scrap metal was in short supply during World War II,
Calder turned to wood. In 1953, the Calder family purchased
a home in Saché, France, and they began dividing their
time between Connecticut, France and periods of extended
travel. By the end of the 1950s, the proportions of
Calder’s mobiles had dramatically increased and he
was completing more site-specific commissions.
Large-scale sheet-metal stabiles commissioned for public
spaces dominate Calder’s late career in the 1960s and
1970s. Their vivid colors, sweeping arches and shapes
evoking birds and animals offer a counterpoint to rectilinear
modern architecture and breathe life into urban environments
around the world. One notable example is Flamingo (1973,
Federal Center Plaza, Chicago). Widely celebrated during
his lifetime, Calder died just a few weeks after the opening
of “Calder’s Universe,” a retrospective
at the Whitney Museum of American Art.
1. Alexander Calder, An Autobiography in Pictures (New
York: Pantheon Books, 1966), p. 113.
2. Ibid.
References:
Arnason, H. H. Calder. Princeton, NJ:
Van Nostrand, 1966.
Calder, Alexander. An Autobiography in Pictures. New
York: Pantheon Books, 1966.
Giménez, Carmen, and Alexander S. C. Rower, ed. Calder:
Gravity and Grace. London: Phaidon Press, 2004.
Lipman, Jean. Calder's Universe. New
York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1976.
Marter, Joan M. Alexander Calder. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1991.
Prather, Marla. Alexander Calder 1898–1976.
Washington D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 1998.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries