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ALEXANDER CALDER
(American, 1898-1976)
The Star, 1960
Polychrome sheet metal and steel wire
35 3/4 x 53 3/4 x 17 5/8”
Bequest of George and Susan Proskauer 1992.17.55
Alexander “Sandy”
Calder—American printmaker, painter, sculptor, illustrator, and
designer—revolutionized the art of sculpture by expressing movement
with his invention of the “mobile,” a word coined in 1931
by Marcel Duchamp to describe Calder’s kinetic, and often whimsical,
sculpture. The son and grandson of Philadelphia sculptors, Calder was
trained as a mechanical engineer before studying at the Art Students League
in New York, where he was a student of the urban realist painter John
Sloane in 1923. Later inspired by the geometry and color employed by Spanish
surrealist Joan Miró, whom he met in 1927, Calder began sculpting
with continuous strands of wire that rendered volume without mass. Critics
described these works as “drawings in space,” which later
led to his “paintings in space”—constructions of abstract
shapes cut from thin sheet metal and painted with primary colors. When
attached to metal rods and suspended in midair, Calder’s “mobiles”
hover and continuously shift with every air current. The flat, colorful
shapes often resemble streamlined birds, fish, leaves, and stars, which
adds an additional playful—and celestial—quality to Calder’s
work. A major contribution to the development of abstract art, Calder’s
floating compositions challenge the notion of sculpture as static compositions
of mass and volume by focusing on the ideas of open space and transparency.
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