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Biography - Alexander Calder
Had Roxbury Connecticut's Alexander "Sandy" Calder (1898-1976)
assumed a career as toy-maker instead of the most innovative
and popular sculptor in American history he likely would have
been a fashioner of kites, yo-yos, balsa-wood planes and
something like the Slinky. Except that his whimsical models
would be of his own invention. For Calder, like most artists
to whom history anoints the title of Master, did much more
than skillfully follow in the footprints of his forebears and
contemporaries. He blazed new trails.
The Pennsylvania born son of two generations of artists and
sculptors graduated with a Master of Engineering degree from
Stevens Institute of Technology in 1919 and began working at
various jobs including drafter, logger and riverboat
firefighter. In1923 he enrolled at the Art Students League in
New York City. In the fall of 1926 he
moved
to Paris and began producing amusing animates from paper,
rags, wire and wood. "Le Cirque Calder," a menagerie of circus
figures accompanied by Victrola music and the artist as
enigmatic ringmaster soon won the hearts of Jean Arp, Marcel
Duchamp and other members the French Avant-garde, sending
Calder's artistic mιtier into orbit. "Why must art be so
serious?" this rugged new American seemed to ask. It was the
first of many questions Calder would ask and then answer.
By 1930 Calder began producing his first purely abstract
sculptures. He joined three-dimensional shapes with wire so
that they seemed to emanate from space. These he put into
motion, first mechanically and then by wind and air alone.
Marcel Duchamp coined a new name for the artworks, calling
them "mobiles." Later Jean Arp would invent a name for
Alexander's works that did not move, calling them "stabiles."
When Calder's sculptures made their New York City premiere at
a gallery in 1932, a New York Times' critic wrote,
"There is something absolutely new in the sculpture at the
Julien Levy Galleries
where "Mobiles" by Alexander Calder
were placed on view yesterday
"Mobiles" are abstract
sculpture set in motion
The bits of wire, now and then
with a colored ball, weave strange patterns when a motor is
turned on
Amazing you agree, but is it Art? What is art
itself? We seem to have here, somehow, more than just an
idle diversion."
Although Calder was breaking new grounds in art he had not yet
found a way of breaking records in sales - scratching the pad
not once at his New York show.
Calder married Louisa Cushing James in 1931. Two years later
they traveled to America and began hunting for a residence
that would prove inspirational as both home and workshop - a
place where the wind would stir Calder's mobiles and the
landscape itself would stir the birth of immense stabiles.
When the young couple were shown a spacious dilapidated 18th
farmhouse on eighteen acres of rolling land in Roxbury, CT
they exclaimed, according to their grandson, "That's it."
Alexander Calder worked in almost every artistic element
including painting (primarily gouache work) and drawings.
Later in his career, often working with the Segre Iron Works
of Waterbury - builder of many of his works - he would become
known for his huge arching abstract sculptures that now find
habitat in plazas and parks worldwide. One of the most famous
is a huge red "Stegosaurus" stabile located adjacent to
Hartford's Wadsworth Athenaeum.
Calder was a tireless worker. Since 1987 the Calder Foundation
has documented more than 17,000 of his works for future
publication in a catalog raisonne. While the odds of locating
a major sculpture is negligible, original Calder art sometimes
appears in the form of witty gifts he crafted for his friends
and neighbors: Stationary bearing original art, personalized
silver and steel jewelry, kitchen utensils spun out of wire,
an aluminum bread pan, birds and pull train toys forged from
tin cans, andirons, a wood-carved mouse, a flower shaped from
pipe cleaners or a dinner bell made by hanging a
wire-suspended cork upside down inside a glass bottle.
His friends have described Calder as a curious, quiet,
likeable man whose hands and thoughts were always in motion.
He was serious about matters of the world and totally devoid
of pretensions. His art can be viewed in numerous books and at
many museums including the
Whitney Museum of Art
(NYC) and Hartford's
Wadsworth Athenaeum.
In addition to having a flair for new approaches to art,
Calder had a flair for art itself. His work is distinctive.
After spending a little time the man you'll discover that
artist's hand was a fresh and original as his imagination.
by
AntiqueTalk.com
Reprinted with permission
Copyright by Wayne Mattox ©
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