|
Alexander
Calder was born July 22, 1898, in Lawnton, Pennsylvania, into a
family of artists--his father was a sculptor and his mother a painter.
Because his father Alexander Stirling Calder received public commissions,
the family traversed the country throughout Alexander Calder's childhood.
Calder was encouraged to create, and from the age of eight he always
had his own workshop wherever* the family lived. For Christmas in
1909, Calder presented his parents with two of his first sculptures,
a tiny dog and duck cut from a brass sheet and bent into formation.
The duck is kinetic-- it rocks back and forth when tapped. Even
at age eleven, his facility in handling materials was apparent.
Despite his talents, Alexander Calder did not originally set out to become
an artist. He instead enrolled at the Stevens Institute of Technology
after high school and graduated in 1919 with an engineering degree.
Calder worked for several years after graduation at various jobs,
including as hydraulics engineer and automotive engineer, timekeeper
in a logging camp, and fireman in a ship's boiler room. While serving
in the latter occupation, on a ship from New York bound for San
Francisco, Calder awoke on the deck to see both a brilliant sunrise
and a scintillating full moon; each was visible on opposite horizons
(the ship then lay off the Guatemalan coast). The experience made
a lasting impression on Calder: he would refer to it throughout
his life.
Calder committed to becoming an artist shortly thereafter, and
in 1923 he moved to New York and enrolled at the Art Students' League.
He also took a job illustrating for the National Police Gazette,
which sent him to the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus
to sketch circus scenes for two weeks in 1925. The circus became
a lifelong interest of Calder's, and after moving to Paris in 1926,
he created his Cirque Calder, a complex and unique body of art.
The assemblage included diminutive performers, animals, and props
he had observed at the Ringling Brothers Circus. Fashioned from
wire, leather, cloth, and other found materials, Cirque Calder was
designed to be manipulated manually by Calder. Every piece was small
enough to be packed into a large trunk, enabling the artist to carry
it with him and hold performances anywhere. Its first performance
was held in Paris for an audience of friends and peers, and soon
Calder was presenting the circus in both Paris and New York to much
success. Calder's renderings of his circus often lasted about two
hours and were quite elaborate. Indeed, the Cirque Calder predated
performance art by forty years.
Alexander Calder found he enjoyed working with wire for his circus: he soon
began to sculpt from this material portraits of his friends and
public figures of the day. Word traveled about the inventive artist,
and in 1928 Calder was given his first solo gallery show at the
Weyhe Gallery in New York. The show at Weyhe was soon followed by
others in New York, as well as in Paris and Berlin: as a result,
Calder spent much time crossing the ocean by boat. He met Louisa
James (a grandniece of writer Henry James) on one of these steamer
journeys and the two were married in January 1931. He also became
friendly with many prominent artists and intellectuals of the early
twentieth century at this time, including Joan Miró, Fernand Léger,
James Johnson Sweeney, and Marcel Duchamp. In October 1930 Calder
visited the studio of Piet Mondrian in Paris and was deeply impressed
by a wall of colored, paper rectangles that Mondrian continually
repositioned for compositional experiments. He recalled later in
life that this experience "shocked" him toward total abstraction.
For three weeks following this visit, he created solely abstract
paintings, only to discover that he did indeed prefer sculpture
to painting. Soon after, he was invited to join Abstraction-Création,
an influential group of artists (including Arp, Mondrian, and Hélion)
with whom he had become friendly.
In the fall of 1931, a significant turning point in Calder's artistic
career occurred when he created his first truly kinetic sculpture
and gave form to an entirely new type of art. The first of these
objects moved by systems of cranks and motors, and were dubbed "mobiles"
by Marcel Duchamp, for in French mobile refers to both motion and
motive. Calder soon abandoned the mechanical aspects of these works
when he realized he could fashion mobiles that would undulate on
their own with the air's currents. Jean Arp, in order to differentiate
Calder's non-kinetic works from his kinetic works, named Calder's
stationary objects "stabiles."
In 1933, Calder and Louisa left France and returned to the United
States, where they purchased an old farmhouse in Roxbury, Connecticut.
Calder converted an icehouse attached to the main house into a studio
for himself. Their first daughter, Sandra, was born in 1935, and
a second daughter, Mary, followed in 1939. He also began his association
with the Pierre Matisse Gallery in New York with his first show
there in 1934. James Johnson Sweeney, who had become a close friend,
wrote the catalogue's preface. Calder also constructed sets for
ballets by both Martha Graham and Eric Satie during the 1930s, and
continued to give Cirque Calder performances.
Calder's earliest attempts at large, outdoor sculptures were also
constructed in this decade. These predecessors of his later imposing
public works were much smaller and more delicate; the first attempts
made for his garden were easily bent in strong winds. Yet, they
are indicative of his early intentions to work on a grand scale.
In 1937, Calder created his first large bolted stabile fashioned
entirely from sheet metal, which he entitled Devilfish. Enlarged
from an earlier and smaller stabile, the work was exhibited in a
Pierre Matisse Gallery show, Stabiles and Mobiles. This show also
included Big Bird, another large work based on a smaller maquette.
Soon after, Calder received commissions to make both Mercury Fountain
for the Spanish Pavilion at the Parisian World Fair (a work that
symbolized Spanish Republican resistance to fascism) and Lobster
Trap and Fish Tail, a sizable mobile installed in the main stairwell
of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
When the United States entered World War II Calder applied for
entry to the Marine Corps but was ultimately rejected. He continued
to create: because metal was in short supply during the war years,
Calder turned increasingly to wood as a sculptural medium. Working
in wood resulted in yet another original form of sculpture, works
called "constellations" by Sweeney and Duchamp. With their carved
wood elements anchored by wire, the constellations were so called
because they suggested the cosmos, though Calder did not intend
that they represent anything in particular. The Pierre Matisse Gallery
held an exhibition of these works in the spring of 1943, Calder's
last solo show at that gallery. His association with Matisse ended
shortly thereafter and he took up the Buchholz Gallery/Curt Valentin
as his New York representation.
The forties and fifties were a remarkably productive period for
Calder, which was launched in 1939 with the first retrospective
of his work at the George Walter Vincent Smith Gallery in Springfield,
Massachusetts. A second, major retrospective was exhibited at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York just a few years later, in 1943.
In 1945, Calder made a series of small-scale works; in keeping with
his economy, many were made from scraps of metal trimmed while making
larger pieces. While visiting Calder's studio about this time, Marcel
Duchamp was intrigued by these small works. Inspired by the idea
that the works could be easily dismantled, mailed to Europe, and
re-assembled for an exhibition, he planned a Calder show at Galerie
Louis Carré in Paris. This important show was held the following
year and Jean-Paul Sartre wrote his famous essay on Calder's mobiles
for the exhibition catalogue. In 1949, Calder constructed his largest
mobile to date, International Mobile, for the Philadelphia Museum
of Art's Third International Exhibition of Sculpture. He designed
sets for Happy as Larry, a play directed by Burgess Meredith, and
for Nuclea, a dance performance directed by Jean Vilar. Galerie
Maeght in Paris also held a Calder show in 1950, and subsequently
became Calder's exclusive Parisian dealer. His association with
Galerie Maeght lasted twenty-six years, until his death in 1976.
After his New York dealer Curt Valentin died unexpectedly in 1954,
Calder selected the Perls Gallery in New York as his new American
dealer, and this alliance also lasted until the end of his life.
Calder concentrated his efforts primarily on large-scale commissioned
works in his later years. Some of these major monumental sculpture
commissions include: .125, a mobile for the New York Port Authority
that was hung in Idlewild (now John F. Kennedy) Airport (1957);
La Spirale, for UNESCO, in Paris (1958); Teodelapio, for the city
of Spoleto, Italy (1962); Man, for the Expo in Montreal (1967);
El Sol Rojo (the largest of all Calder's works, at sixty-seven feet
high) installed outside the Aztec Stadium for the Olympic Games
in Mexico City; La Grande Vitesse, the first public art work to
be funded by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) for the city
of Grand Rapids, Michigan (1969); and Flamingo, a stabile for the
General Services Administration in Chicago (1973).
As the range and breadth of his various projects and commissions
indicate, Calder's artistic talents were renowned worldwide by the
1960s. A retrospective of his work opened at the Guggenheim Museum
in New York in 1964. Five years later the Fondation Maeght, in Saint-Paul-de-Vence,
France, held its own Calder retrospective. In 1966, Calder, together
with his son-in-law Jean Davidson, published a well-received autobiography.
Additionally, both of Calder's dealers, Galerie Maeght in Paris
and the Perls Gallery in New York averaged about one Calder show
each per year.
In 1976, he attended the opening of yet another retrospective of
his work, Calder's Universe, at the Whitney Museum of American Art
in New York. Just a few weeks later, Alexander Calder died in 1976 in the
United States.
|