Born
in 1898 in Philadelphia, Calder came from a family of artists.
Both his father and grandfather were well-known sculptors, and
his mother was a painter. Throughout his young life, Calder was
more interested in mechanics and engineering than art. After graduating
high school he attended the Stevens Institute of Technology, receiving
his degree in 1919. Within a short while, however, his creative
energies turned toward art and he enrolled in the Art Student's
League in New York. Working as a freelance illustrator, Calder
began to paint and sculpt. Soon after his first one man show in
New York, Calder left for Paris.
It was then that
he began work on one of his most famous projects, the "Calder
Circus". The "Circus" was a miniature reproduction
of an actual circus. Made from wire, cork, wood, cloth and other
easily found materials, the "Circus" was a working display
that Calder would show regularly. A mix between a diorama, a child's
toy, and a fair game, Calder's "Circus" found many eager
fans among the avant-garde. One of the methods used to create
the "Circus" was the bending of wire to form realistic
figures. Drawn to the ease and simplicity of it, Calder began
to make wire portraits. A combination of a line drawing and of
sculpture, these instant portraits represented a new possibility
in three dimensional art.
By the early 1930s
Calder had brought his "Circus" to the United States
and back, and was living in Paris off the proceeds of his regular
performances. While regularly fixing and adding to the "Circus",
Calder began to show and work on wire and wood sculpture as well
as painting. It was around this time that he became interested
in the work of the Surrealist painter Joan Mir and the modernist
painter Piet Mondrian. Both men had gone beyond abstraction and
were making paintings of colors and shapes with no direct reference
to the outside world. Enthusiastic about this embrace of form
and color, Calder began to make moving sculptures in a similar
vane.
Beginning with painted
aluminum and wire, Calder created motored objects that could move
to create different visual effects. In a short while, however,
he realized that the mechanized movement didn't have the fluidity
or the surprise he wanted in his work. He decided to let them
hang and have the wind or a slight touch begin their movement.
When the experimental French artist Marcel Duchamp saw them, he
named them "mobiles" (a pun on the French for "to
move" and "motive"). These new sculptures, arranged
by the chance operations of the wind, went against everything
that sculpture had been. They were not monumental, nor were they
sober. They were simply about form and color and the joy in creating
both. So, in his early thirties Alexander Calder had not only
found a project he would continue for the rest of his life, he
had created a unique form of art, the mobile.
In 1933, Calder
and his wife, Louisa James, moved to Roxbury, Connecticut, where
they would spend the rest of their lives. Working on hundreds
of small mobiles, Calder became interested in making large, more
substantial works as well. Using similar colorful abstract forms,
he made giant metal structures whose shapes and colors stood out
bravely in both rural and urban settings. Known as "stabiles,"
these works often had a similar whimsical quality to the smaller
kinetic pieces. By the time of his first major show at the Museum
of Modern Art in 1943, Calder's quiet revolution was known internationally.
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s he was commissioned to create site
specific "stabiles" and had major retrospectives in
a number of cities including Amsterdam, Berne, and Rio de Janiero.
By 1970, Calder
had reached the height of his fame. He had worked regularly creating
thousands upon thousands of objects, everything from jewelry to
children's toys to major monuments for the Lincoln Center in New
York and UNESCO in Paris. That same year his gifts were honored
again with a comprehensive show at the Guggenheim Museum and a
smaller one at the Museum of Modern Art. In 1976, Alexander Calder
died. Throughout his life, his commitment to creating work free
from the pretensions of the art world and accessible to all, never
stopped him from making exquisitely beautiful and important sculpture.
In a century that saw the forms of art and literature reinvented
regularly, Alexander Calder stands out as one of the great pioneers
of his time.
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