Alexander Calder R Solo
Alexander Calder R Solo
Alexander Calder R Solo
*V
I
\
Solomon
R.
Guggenheim Museum
and Archives
http://www.archive.org/details/alexandercalderrOOsolo
ALEXANDER CALDER
A
RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION
THE SOLOMON
R.
Number
64-66058
Printed
in the
THE SOLOMON
H.
GI'IJKF.NHKIM
FOCNDATION
TRUSTEES
HAKHY
F.
GUGdKNHKIM,
I'HF.SIDKNT
DANA DRAPER
PETER
A.
O.
LAWSON-JOHNSTON
CHAUNCET NEWL1N
MRS.
HENRY OBRE
MICHAEL F.WETTACH
MEDLEY
O. B.
WHELPLEY
CARL ZIOROSSER
ALEXANDER CALDER,
est
in the
judgment
of
many
critics, is
America's great-
modern
sculptor.
life
work
at
The
therefore, an event
we owe
to a public
will
its
undoubtedly provide a
fitting
own grasp
of space establishes
Wright
architectural vision.
Harry
F.
'"He
is
is
it is
equally
and allegiance
is
French.
It
was
to
young student
in 1926,
it
was
in Paris that
it
who
was
no
less
embarked upon
his early
ties
town
their residence
America.
In
Roxbury and
in
live
surrounded by rolling
hills
and
flowers,
by
art
and work
in progress.
filled
metal, painting and sculpture. In both places, the lawns are dotted with stabiles and
The current
the old
exhibition, therefore, cannot but reflect the artist's double orientation toward
their respective attributes of tradition
it
and innovation.
Thus,
is
is
Paris and
New
York,
The
that have
made
common
Thomas M. Messer,
Director,
JL-&ty
sislfi
wm
tn
il
i 1 1
^B
^Sj
UliHitffafen
m!
if
t
U
t
<
ftPMuf
Stf
is
based upon
loans received from private and public collections throughout the world.
made
pos-
work and
its
presentation to a large
in the
me
to visit his
in Sache,
France
his
and and
in
to borroiv at will
from
Among
these ivere
many
of his
works
of early
and
before.
Calder's help, however, extended beyond the act of lending. Although his
ivork
is
memory and
generous ivillingness
to
engage
in
and
guided us
Calder's
many
New
Matisse galleries in
New
tributed their important shares through loans, through the ready availability of their files
in the pre-
arrival
Davidson, the
importantly
artist's son-in-law,
among lenders
to the exhibition.
Pedro E. Guerrero
who
in connection with
an
extensive, future
his exclusive
photographic services
to this catalogue.
Grateful acknowledgement
is
also
due
to
our
museum
colleagues at the
d' Art
Moderne
in Paris, the
Louis in the United States, and The Art Gallery of Toronto in Canada
interest
whose
and
initiative
made showings
Guggenheim Museum.
has been heavily engaged in ex-
As
is
this
museum's
staff
hibition
tive.
to the
staff
members
in various ways,
among whom
T.M.M.
11
INTRODUCTION
THOMAS
M.
MESSER
Alexander Calder
will forever
is
be remembered as the
is
sculpture
move;
it
invention that
Orient decorative, moving and sound-producing objects have existed for centuries, but the
deliberate utilization of motion as an element of
form
is
striking, original
and
its
significant. It is
an idea large and profound enough to render well deserved the fame that
inventor derives
the
from it but
it is
all
To
fully. Calder's
mobile must be
emergence from
concepts and
felt
its
ultimate integration
full
before
reward
in
were, of Calder's
life
as an artist.
may be
and
estab-
stylistic
disappear so that chronologically earlier characteristics often persist as new ones are added.
In an art that
exhibition sequence also followed in this catalogue, therefore, must stand as a grand simplification in which the broad and dramatic outline substitutes
itself
for a
maze
of finer lines.
In the beginning
was the
on paper describing,
among
other themes,
Calder's favorite circus world. Acrobats perform their time-honored tricks; horses and lions
get into the act
and rope dancers provide a graphic example of that extraordinary balance with
which Calder
from the
outset
Then,
all
no longer be confined
it
to the fiat
paper surface. As
if
lifts itself
into space
Balancing Lady
Ink.
lated into wire. Subjects first continue naturally in a vein already familiar to the artist's pencil:
Wire
likenesses
ence. Josephine Baker and Helen Wills, Leger, Varese, Calvin Coolidge
mit to Calder's space-line to become part of a gallery of fame in our time. In these, Calder
acquits himself as an accomplished portraitist, achieving formal
able likeness. Allegorical creations, such as the
harmony
besides a recognizelike
in the act of
Roman
she-wolf
artist at
acquired
skill in
from draftsmanship
to the
realm of sculpture.
13
work. His innate curiosity coupled with a need for explicit sculptural volumes lead him
to
experiment
in
wood, plaster and bronze casting, sheet metal, glass and any number
of other
lifters,
now
his
new
sculptural pursuits.
Works
combining
abound during
this fertile
wood
is
established.
Men
High. Wood.
A
its
separate episode, too delightful to be omitted, has to do with jewelry making. Besides
appeal to Calder as terrain inconnue, the intimacy of the jewelry craft must exert a spe-
cial fascination
upon an
artist
and
temporary abandonment
skill
to the exigencies of
an intimate
art.
he
No shape is ever
repeated,
nor does Calder permit commercial exploitation through duplication and mass production. Instead, a few exquisite pieces
\
Pin. Silver.
responding to ornamental
line in Calder's
work occurs
when
in his early thirties. At this time an already prodigious but playfully freestyle.
The new
itself
Masked behind
and textures
first
a poetic awareness of
one of the
among such
constructions.
to
a sphere described
each
other.
and
transcends the spheric limits. Attached from the circle's zenith and reaching upward are two
quivering wire rods, sustaining at their ends two wooden globes one black, the other white.
Universe
is.
of course,
what
its title
upon
also
is
title
thus
may have
a touch of self-mockery.
but
we respond
easily to its
dynamic stimulants.
to
go further and
make
(an old concept of the visual arts) to actual motion (in this sense unexplored before except
for the restricted contributions of the Russian Constructivists). 1 In the early 1930's the artist
this end.
New
York,
Museum
of
Modern
The
that shake
flexibility
and
medium
lends
itself to
may make
enough
a wire fish
"swim"
in a wire
bowl
is,
however,
to wire
and
White Frame.
springs.
The
visually appealing
it
existing
harmony
and
colors.
it
Calder,
in the expressive
Not
all
chanical apparatus cannot always be integrated without loss of formal purity. Also, motors
itself
which the
artist seeks.
motion needs
to
upon
Only
only in this elegant form, in partially controlled, but non-repetitive and spontaneous move-
its full
potential.
In
its
purest form the mobile hangs, supported by a string or wire, balancing abstract
shapes of varying complexity, which according to chance impetus of wind or breeze engage in
parallel or opposite
movements
of
uneven
to vast spans)
and
in
variations of the mobile structure and that of the shapes, colors and materials of
composite
the direction
mem-
bers.
For not
all
walls or
all
from
static sup-
V"
Mobile. Wood, metal, cord.
successful examples,
is
mark
The mobile,
then. Calder's
its
inventor's art.
has
its
which
later
merely ideated
sense of
movement
come
increasingly articulated in
in the breeze as
well defined
of artiit
free to describe a
movement
of
its
own: but
movements
construction
is
made
moves
in a contrapuntal
we have
risen be-
yond mere
motion as
gratification with
a controlled
'Patrick Heron.
oj Art,
p.
222.
15
"Idem.
textures,
is
tran-
scended by the dimension of time. The mobile thus does become a kind of visual music in
in time
and space
to
be conveyed to
the viewer rather than the listener through the eye rather than through the ear.
its
is
latter is free
and
motion
is
subject to control.
serves also as a measure of the capacities and limitaof the visual arts and Calder's coura-
geous invasion of these neighboring territories furnishes for such theories the needed example.
If in
its
harnessing as an element
seem
meaning
re-
and
abandon and
less
this
Among
the structures Calder created during this phase are the constellations, with
wooden shape
to another.
The number
of carved
wood
forms, their diversity in scale and color, and their attachment to wire rods of varying length
continue, despite their immobility, to evoke a sense of
stellations
movement
in
may be
that motion
comparable
force.
full
The
stabiles proper,
shape give way to sculptural mass. They share with the earliest abstract constructions their
immobility. However, the two, separated by several years, are different in kind: for the constructions
stabiles,
power
The
often
made
and are
in-
composed
creased technical complexity of the process of fabrication, they are hand-made only in model
form. The small original maquette, cut and constructed by Calder. goes to the iron works with
Snow Plow. Sheet
metal.
exact specifications to be translated, under the artist's close supervision, into large or
monu-
mental scale. Although, from a technical standpoint, these enlargements could be multiplied
at will, all
works
to date are
command
of the artist.
recall objective
The
whimsical shapes
images
names
and
is
and
masses are, in accordance with modern extensions of the sculptural definition, often perforated
16
Mobile and
stabile
restless
':
and inventive
both had to be
imagination. Neither did in any sense "happen" nor was either of them "there
shaped by a forceful creativeness. They represent extreme positions on a scale predicated by motion
at
opposites
came about
in the
form of a combination
still
developing.
As
a result,
in
possible cross-
for example,
is
to the
mobile
from whose projecting crowns dangle tiny mobiles. Then again, elaborately unduupon
delicate supports. In all these, the size
may
Five Rudders. Sheet metal, metal rods
fifty feet.
then, results
from a fusion
static
compositions the fruit of former labors has been gathered. The early strive toward motion
Alexander Calder
assumes a central position
is
a sculptor in
motion-
in his
work.
From
he strays at
will,
gathered strength which he applies to his principal task. Thus, not only his drawings and his gouaches, but also his paintings, prints and book illustrations, his jewelry, tapestry and various functional whatnots should be seen as part of a total production. Calder's minor arts are
part and parcel of the
related
and contributory
main
media can be
of sparkling quality
and
charm.
Prints, graphic
still
He
him
at
first,
when
and again
after
the
when he
felt
much more
the gouache, however, and the watercolor which have consistently fascinated Calder
in a
two dimensional
art.
some sculptures
of the
again, a later gouache style seems to relate to the tapestry craft which has interested Calder
since the 1950's. His most recent output of gouaches
tained. It flows freely
and watercolors
is
entirely self-con-
hand
to
and that of
inspired by mechanical and organic motifs, fuses abstract construction and figurative expression to
make form
live in
Untitled.
Gouache
17
H^gH
1898
Born
in Philadelphia.
1919
Institute of Technology.
19231926
1926
Worked
drawing
for
Began
1927
circus:
first
animated
New
1928 1929
one
man
show.
fish.
Weyhe
Gallery,
New
York.
Neumann
Nierendorf. Berlin.
1930
Influenced by Mondrian. experimented briefly with abstract painting, began abstract sculpture.
Participated in
group exhibition.
1931
XI e Salon d'Araignee, Salon des Surindependants, Paris; Museum of Modern Art, New York.
shown
at
1932
Vignon, Paris.
Showed
1933
Visited
also at Julien
Levy Gallery,
New York.
circus, objects, drawings.
Returned
1934
1935
New York
first
1936
New York.
1937
Mercury Fountain
Exhibition.
for
Mayor
Gallery. London.
1938 1939
1940
1941
Museum
York.
of
Modern
Art.
New York.
Willard Gallery.
New
Mobile
1943
Constellations.
Major
retrospective.
Museum
of
Modern
at
Art.
1944
1946
Buchholz Gallery.
Museum. Amsterdam.
Work begun on
:
film with
Herbert Matter.
Visited Brazil exhibitions in Rio de Janeiro. Ministry of Education and Sao Paulo. Museude Arte.
1950
first of
to Brittany.
Finland. Sweden.
1952
1953
Acquired house
at
Sache, France.
1954
1955
for
Sarabhai Ahmedabad.
1956
1957
1958
New York.
:
Mobile
for
mobile
for
UNESCO.
Paris.
1959
1960
1961
Exhibition,
Janeiro.
New
York.
American
Institute of Architects
Medal.
1962
Creative Arts
Award
Wallham. Massachusetts.
at
1963
1964
Documenta
III.
Kassel. Germany.
19
\^>
'
' <s
^t^
k^B
22
~-
_.
23
4^
24
Kitchen, Roxbury
below: Louisa
!a
25
rvwi\<;s.
4.icaiiii<
:s,
iixustration
lie
Gazette
in 1924.
returned to draw
indeed, inspired
much
Many
of these sketches
were
published in 1926 in a
book
called
Animal Sketching.
Threeloung
Rats, 1944;
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. 1946 and Selected Fables of La Fontaine, 1948. In 1950.
illustrators of children's
much
of his early
work
in other
media.
His calligraphic style reappears in his toys and circus, his wire sculpture
stabiles.
&1L
kx
V Ab
/
;
--
.,:,%\
A\
The Animal
22%
30%".
New
York.
22%
Galleries,
New
York.
ft
ih
T\-
artist.
Dancer with
22%
New \or
28
w
s ?s^
-'*_*"
,
"y
->,->
A&J
=*
&
^
fe'
V
"XI
Tumblers. No.
II.
1931. Ink.
22%
New
York.
Ben Hut.
1931. Ink,
22%
New
York.
artist.
V.
29
toys,
rim
is. wiiti:
sn
Calder went to Paris in 1926 and there he began his miniature circus.
First he fashioned tiny,
bits
veloped into a circus replete with horses, dogs, tigers, ducks and acrobats.
He gave performances
circus were
his
famous
In 1926 Calder
made
single
portrait heads,
figure compositions
in the circus
sculptures,
foreshadowed
and
dimensionality and scale. They range from a few inches the delightful
Spectacles with their dangling eyes and
nose to
as
much
as eight feet
in Calder's
Romulus and Remus and Spring. This unique genre was shown
first
one-man exhibition
at the
Weyhe
Gallery in
New \ork
in 1928.
him The
to
first
necklace.
early jewelry
was almost
entirely
began
cut
and bent
in a variety of
wavs.
to
artist.
c.
1960.
enter: Toy
c.
1960.
tin. c.
10"h.
Wood,
12"h.
Wood,
wire.
c.
10"b.
artis
:>,2
34
46%"h. Collection
the artist.
above: Romulus and Remus. 1928. Wire, wood, 31 x 112". Collection the
artist.
below: Horse,
c.
1927. Wire,
Galleries,
New Yoik.
:!(.
Mme. Nadia
37
*~\
/
ahove: Pin. Silver,
5%
x 3V4".
c.
Collection Mrs.
Collection Miss
:.;:
apposite boll
Pin. Silver,
3%
Talcoll Clapp,
Woodbury, Conn
39
WOOI AMI
ItltON/l
SI
I'll in:
He
took up
first
wood
New York
in 1928.
The
wooden
sculptures were executed in fairly low relief but Calder soon developed
their robust three dimensionality.
figures,
and the ever present Calder zoo cats, dogs, horses, birds and
in a variety of
carved
woods.
in the twenties.
Calder
has occasionally returned to the use of wood, in the abstract constellations of the 1940's for example.
veloped out of the wire and metal sculpture, and despite his feeling for
of metal.
posed of
flat
human
figures
and
later in
more
abstract bronzes
for
most sculpture.
it
When
measurement
for the
indicated,
Conn,
c.
1933.
artist.
opposite: Apple Monster. 1938. Apple branch, wire, 67"h. Collection the artist.
Andrew Gagarin,
Litchfield, Connecticut.
43
Alts I
It
ACT CONSTRUCTIONS
Upon
artists
in 1930,
Calder met
many
to
Mondrian's studio
all
and for
sociated himself with a circle of abstract artists and joined the group
AI>straction-Creation. His
primary colors.
These geometric works, named "stabiles" by Jean Arp. were shown for
the first time at the Galerie Percier in Paris in 1931.
artist.
Gibraltar. 1936.
Wood,
tile arli-t.
45
above: Constellation,
c.
1943.
Wood, metal
rods.
31%
x 36 'is".
12%
x 18"
46
Constellation. 1943.
Wood, metal
The Solomon
R.
17
TIIAXSITIO* TO JIOTIOX
The germ
toys
of the idea of
in Calder's
work. The
in a
move
humor-
ous naturalistic manner. The acrobats tumble, the horses gallop and Josephine Baker undulates ever so slightly in her provocative dance.
had
made
water are
moved by
crank.
When
future.
Soon
after
new
moving objects
in
in his
which
at
The
hand cranks.
Their
first
Vignon
in Paris.
to
name
the
new works.
48
Fishbowl
ivith
artist.
artist.
50
Tlie
x above: Dancing Torpedo Shape. 1932. Wood, wire, metal, motor, 24 /2"h.
Collection
Pittsfield.
Massachusetts.
36%
25%"
51
tlOltll
I>
The idea
of spontaneous
to
moved
in controlled
and
pre-
his mobiles
were propelled by
first
air
made
the
"wind mobile."
As
the
the
movement
of the
forms became
freer. Fanciful,
to con-
form
of towers,
mobiles for indoors and outdoors and mobiles ranging in size from small
and
fragile
webs
to
Calder has
made mobiles
decor for Martha Graham, the ingenious Mercury Fountain for the
Spanish Pavilion for the 1937 Paris Exposition, and even a sort of water
mobile,
first
designed for the New York World's Fair in 1939 and ultimately
executed in 1954 as a Water Ballet for the General Motors Technological Center in Detroit. His architectural commissions include monumental
mobiles lor Idlewild Airport and the 1958 Brussels Worlds Fair.
An
ex-
ample
of a recent motorized
is
the 30 foot
Four
52
Mobile. 1936? Wood, metal, cord, 39 x 36". Collection The Solomon R. Guggenheim
Collection
Mary Reynolds;
(j
c.
1940.
opposite:
Red
Mary Reynolds:
New York.
Il
lll l
'
54
HP
Collection
Whitney Museum
of
American Art,
35%".
1957.
c.
504"1.
New
York.
59: Black Mobile With Hole. 1954. Sheet metal, metal rods, wire, 88 x 102".
Collection Mr. and Mrs. Jean Davidson.
Sarin''.
57
France.
i.
\\
opposite:
Model
49%
x 94"
New \ork.
New
"iork.
STAICII
hile
and
style.
The
of a
During the
forties,
The
constellation
is
constructed
wood and
stands or
is
These
form and
Thev
recent
Some
Among
I
which stands
in the
middle of
and
is
large
to pass
under
In
November 1964 an
Maeght
62
c.
Man.
c.
1945.
64
below:
Snow Plow.
opposite:
Knobs and
New
York.
New
York.
66
leif.Funghi
A" en.
right
a.
114"h.
b.
76"h.
New
York.
New York.
New York.
MOKI
-VI AISI
B.i:S
the
mass
and strength
profile.
in size
from several
the
feet
to
huge construc-
Among
Cross of 1963.
/*
zy
70
Red Curlicue
with Six Davits. 1959. .Sheet metal, metal rods, wire, 49 1/s"h.
New
York.
New
York.
mmmmmmmm
Collection
Four Elements, Stockholm. 1962. Sheet metal, motor, 360"h. Mmlerna Museet, Stockholm.
71
New
York.
UNESCO
artist.
360"h.
72
Jt
'"
".*jS& -'flHEs
>
--
iiH
".pi
r
"'
.
LZ_
sJ-
c.
opposite: Fire Rudders. 1964. .Sheet metal, metal rods, 154 x 130}
Collection Washington University, St. Louis.
known
is
as the sculptor
who
and the
stabile.
His painting
known only
to a few. Yet
canvases of the
circus date
In
more recent
become
filled
and
figurative.
He
28%
41%". Collection
the artist.
77
78
Black-
29Vfe".
Red Drip.
IN
V.
V.
79
80
C7alleries.
New
York.
below
New
York.
29% New
x 42 Vz" York.
8L>
'ntitled.
196
1.
Gouache,
43%
29%". Courtesy
Perls Galleries.
New
York.
84
SELECTIVE
A
Alexander Calder,
IMIIMIMiltll'lh
New
York,
Museum
of
Modern
Art,
None
of the
and reviews
listed in
In short,
ography up
II.M
STBATKB BY
lALIIEII
Bestiary,
New
Alexander Calder
Circus,
New
STATKJIKXT BY
\l III
II
[Statement]
in
r. v.,
eds.
Temoignages pour
I'art abstrait
HOOKS
WO
IM.tllMII.KTS
heron, Patrick. The Changing Forms oj Art, London. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1955, pp. 221-225.
ragon, Michel. L'aventure de
I'art abstrait, Paris, Laffont, 1956, pp.
220-223.
1957, pp. 23-40.
gomez
sicre, jose.
Four
New
Neuchatel, Editions du Griffon, 1959, pp. 85-91, 124, 189, 191, 204, 217,
New
Seventeen Artists,
New
New
c.
son,
Ugo Mulas.
85
>IA.
March
1,
C0AN, ellen stone. "The Mobiles of Alexander Calder," Vassar Journal of Undergraduate Studies, Poughkeepsie,
New
no. 3,
May
SWEENEY. JAMES Johnson. "El humor de Alexander Calder. Le Imprime Gracia y Fantasia a su Arte," Norte,
January 1944.
New
York,
vol, 7. no. 4,
3,
1947, p. 45.
Janu-
vol. 3, no. 1.
1951, p. 5.
Schiller, ronald. "Calder," Portfolio, the Annua! of the Graphic Arts, Cincinnati, The Zebra Press,
Duel!, Sloane
New
York,
Plastiqu.es, Brussels,
nevvton, eric. "Critic wiretaps Alexander Calder," Neiv York Times Magazine,
New York.
August
seirerling, Dorothy. "Calder, his gyrating mobile art wins international fame and prizes." Life,
New
York,
vol. 33,
August
newton,
August-September
1953, pp.
vol. 13.
December
XXe
et a
Miroir, Paris, nos. 69-70, October-November 1954. Issue devoted to Calder. Contains Henri Pichette.
offert a
"Poeme
Alexander Calder
B.
R. k. ""II
Labirinto dei Ragazzi." Casabella. Milan, no. 203. November-December 1954, pp. 50-54.
bruguiere,
P. c.
vol. 1. no. 7,
February
17, 1955, p. 4.
vol. 7, no. 2.
February
19, 1955, p. 5.
schlosser, Manfred. "Fernand Leger und Alexander Calder Austellung in der Easier Kunsthalle," Raukunst and
Werkjorm, Niirnberg.
Derriere le Miroir, Paris, no. 113. 1959. Issue devoted to Calder. Contains Jean Davidson, "Le luron aux prolege-
genoux"; Georges Salles. "Stabiles"; checklist of exhibition, Galerie Maeght. Paris, March 6-Apri]
casser, helmi. "Alexander Calder," Werk, Zurich, vol. 46. no. 12,
13. 1959.
December
Extract pub-
New
New
York.
March
25. 1962.
gosling, nigel. "Flirting with the Fourth Dimension," The Observer Weekend Review, London, Sunday. July
8.
1962.
lucie-smith, edward.
p. 106.
New
sweeney, james JOHNSON. "Alexander Calder: Work and Play," Art in America,
1963, pp. 93-99.
New
4,
August
86
November
New
4.
December
1963, pp.
"Connecticut Colossi
in
Gargantualand," Time,
New
York,
p. 72.
New
March
On
a visit to Calder at
"Le case
di
in
June 1964,
pp.
88-101.
New
York,
SELECTED
i:\IIIIII
IO>
CATALOGUES
Cincinnati, April
7-May
3,
text
Swedish.
New
Haven, Conn., 1950. Collection oj Societe Anonyme, Marcel Duchamp, biography, bibliography.
Museum
oj
Modern
Art,
New
York, January 15-February 10, 1952, Alexander Calder: Gongs and Towers. Contains
2,
und
Lange. Krefeld:
Ziirich.
Kunsthalle.
1,
KUNSTGEWERBEMUSEUM,
Ziirich.
May-June
und
Hans
calerie d'art MODERNE, Basel, 1962, 31 Gestalter einer totalen visuelen Synthese. Introduction by C. Belloli.
May
25-June
5.
documenta
hi,
5, 1964, vol. 1,
87
THE SOLOMON
R.
GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM
STAFF
Director
Thomas M- Messer
Curator
Associate Curator
Assistant Curator
Lawrence Allowas
Louise Averill Svendsen
Daniel Robbins
Carol Fuer stein and Rose Carol Wash.'on
Research Fellows
Librarian
Public Affairs
Everett Ellin
Membership
Registrar
Carol Tormey
Kathleen W. Thompson
Orrin Riley and Saul Fuerstein
Conservation
Photography
Custodian
Business Administrator
Glenn H. Easton,
Jr.
Administrative Assistant
Office
iola H.
Gleason
Manager
Agnes R. Connolly
Elizabeth
Purchasing Agent
Sales Supervisor
M. Funghini
Christine E. Black
Building Superintendent
Peter G. hoggin
Head Guard
George
J.
Sauve
PHOTOGRAPHIC CREDITS
made By Pedro
E.
Guerrero
Robert E. Mates:
p. 1-1 top,
15 top
p.
41 below
p.
INESCO
Headquarters. Paris:
p.
73
84
Exhibition 64/1
November
February 1965
"Alexander
('.alder
Retrospective Exhibition"
ALEXANDER
CALDER
RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION
LEPERS
TO THE EXHIBITION
Collection,
New
York
York
New
New York
Robert
New
York
New York
Mr. and Mrs. Jean Davidson. Sache, France Mr. and Mrs. Sampson R. Field. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Furman.
New York
York
New
Litchfield, Connecticut
Illinois
Long Island
Collection,
New
York
New York
Madame Nadia
of Toronto
Massachusetts
Modern
Art.
New York
New York
New
York
Neumann.
<
!ai
acas
Louis
Whitney Museum
of
American Art,
New York
New York
Galerie Maeght. Paris
Perls Galleries,
New York
New York
WORKS
IN
THE EXHIBITION
15.
UNTITLED.
Lent by Perls
1931. Ink,
16.
UNTITLED.
1931. Ink,
17.
New
York.
18.
New
York.
EARLY mt A
l\..
WATEIUOLOKS.
II
IHM.lt
YI'll
19.
1932. Ink,
14%
x 19".
New
IN
York.
1.
1928.
20.
THE RING.
New York.
2.
AFRICAN FAMILY.
1931. Ink.
30%
x 22%".
21.
UNTITLED.
Lent by Perls
1932. Ink,
New
York.
3.
BALANCING LADY.
1931. Ink,
x 30%".
22.
4.
BATHERS.
1931. Ink, 22 7 /s x
23.
1935. Ink,
22%
x 31".
New
5.
BEN HUR.
1931. Ink,
24.
COMPOSITION.
Lent by the
artist.
6.
COUPLE IN EGYPT.
22%
30%".
25.
UNIVERSE.
Lent by the
New York.
1931. Ink,
artist.
7.
22% x 30%".
26.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
22%
x 30%".
New
York.
artist.
8.
1931. Ink,
22%
x 30%".
27.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
30%".
New York.
19%
x 25%".
28.
artist.
9.
LION'S LEAP.
CONSTRUCTION.
Lent by the
artist.
New
II.
York.
10.
1931. Ink,
22%
30%".
29.
STRANGE WORLD.
Lent by the
artist.
1939. Ink,
22%
x 31".
New
York.
11.
1931. Ink,
22%
x 30%".
30.
STRANGE WORLD.
Lent by the
artist.
1939. Ink,
30%
x 22 %".
New
19%
York.
12.
UNTITLED.
1931. Ink,
25V2 ".
31.
UNTITLED,
Lent by the
c.
1940. Ink,
22%
x 31".
New York.
19%
x
artist.
13.
UNTITLED.
1931. Ink.
25%".
32.
c.
1940. Ink,
22%
x 15%".
New
York.
14.
UNTITLED.
1931. Ink.
33.
COMPOSITION
III.
Lithograph,
19%
15%".
New
York.
EARLY OILS
34.
53.
CIRCUS.
23%
x 32".
54.
35.
COMPOSITION.
Lent by the
artist.
x 32".
55.
1928. Wire.
14%"
h.
37.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
23%
x 23%".
56.
artist.
MANNEQUIN,
Lent by the
c.
artist.
39.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
10%".
57.
artist.
FLOWER,
Lent by the
c.
1928. Wire.
10%"
h.
40.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
16%".
58.
artist.
artist.
SHOTPUT.
Lent by the
c.
41.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
1930.
artist.
artist.
59. 42.
1928.
UNTITLED.
Lent by the
artist.
artist.
60.
1928.
Lent by the
61.
TOY VELOCIPEDE,
Lent by the
artist.
c.
4%"
h.
most sculpture.
is
When
a
it
measurement
for the
indicated,
62.
HORSE,
c.
1928. Wire,
artist.
20V2 "
h.
Lent by the
h.
d. for
diameter.
63.
44.
CIRCUS.
ELEPHANT,
Lent by the
c.
1926-32.
artist.
Lent by the
artist.
45.
JOSEPHINE BAKER
Lent by the
artist.
1.
64.
JIMMY DURANTE, c.
Collection Jean and
1928. Wire.
11%"
h.
Connecticut.
46.
JOSEPHINE BAKER
Collection Dr.
II.
65.
PORTRAIT OF C.
15%"
h.
Long
47.
Island.
1928.
HORSE,
c.
1927. Wire.
27%"
h.
New York.
h.
48.
BIRD.
1928. Wire,
artist.
11%"
67.
ARCHING MAN.
Lent by the
artist.
1929. Wire,
13%"
h.
Lent by the
49.
ACROBAT SIGN.
Lent by the
artist.
1928. Wire,
46%"
h.
68.
1929. Wire,
64%"
h.
50.
CALVIN COOLIDGE.
Lent by the
artist.
1928. Wire,
12%"
h.
69.
51.
HELEN WILLS.
Lent by the
artist.
1928. Wire,
20%"
h.
70.
h.
52.
71.
LITTLE GIRL.
Lent by the
1929. Wire,
26%"
h.
artist.
72.
NEGRESS.
1929. Wire.
17%"
h.
85.
PIN.
c.
6%
x 7%".
New York.
c.
73.
SPRING.
87.
Silver, gold,
1940-50.
Lent by the
74.
UNKNOWN.
Lent by the
88.
PIN.
c.
1950. Silver,
3%
x 4V2".
artist.
75.
ACROBATS.
1929. Wire,
33%"
h.
89.
RING.
PIN.
c.
c.
BRACELET,
76.
1950. Silver,
2%"
h.
MARIAN GREENWOOD.
Lent by the
artist.
1930. Wire.
12%"
h.
310.
77.
PIN.
c.
1950. Brass,
3%"
h.
LEGER.
York.
Collection
Madame Nadia
PIN.
c.
78.
LOUISA.
Connecticut.
Lent by the
91. 79.
PIN.
Silver,
SVa-h.
VARESE.
Collection Mrs.
Lent by the
323.
80.
SPECTACLES.
Long
Island.
EARRINGS. Brass, gilt, IVz" h. EARRINGS. Silver, 1% x 2%". NAIL PROTECTOR. Silver, Vk" h. NECKLACE. Brass, gilt, cord, 1% x
PIN. Brass,
gilt,
15".
6Y4"h.
81.
PIN "MS".
PIN "MS".
Silver. Silver,
.
3%"
4"
h.
h.
PIN
82.
(Butterfly)
Silver,
ZVz"
h.
BIRD.
Lent bv the
311.
BRACELET.
Silver,
5%"
h.
New
York.
312.
BUCKLE.
Silver,
4"
d.
JEWELRY
83.
New York.
DAISY PIN.
c.
1929. Brass.
5%"
d.
Collection Miss
WOOD
95.
AXIt IIRO\ZE
1928.
I'll hi:
92.
ELODIE
PIN.
c.
1939. Brass,
5%"
h.
ACROBATS.
Lent by the
Wood, 27%"
h.
artist.
84.
BRACELET.
1940-41. Brass,
h.
3%"
h.
96.
COW.
1928.
Wood, 12%"
h.
Jr..
Bridgewater, Connecticut.
93.
BROOCH,
c.
HIGH HELLO.
Lent by the
1928.
Wood, 33%"
h.
New
York.
artist.
94.
BRACELET, c. 1946. Gold, 1%" h. BUCKLE, c. 1946. Brass, 4 x 7". NECKLACE, c. 1946. Silver, cord, 2
Collection Mrs. Harry
99.
NYMPH.
1928.
Wood. 35"
h.
Lent by the
x 12".
artist.
Hood
Bassett,
New
York.
100.
1928.
Wood. 65%"
h.
86.
JEWELRY.
Before 1942.
101.
102.
DOUBLE CAT.
Lent by the
1929.
ABSTRACT CONSTRUCTIONS
artist.
SPHERE.
h.
Lent by the
artist.
121.
UNIVERSE.
Lent by the
104.
PELICAN.
Lent by the
1929.
Wood. 28"
h.
artist.
artist.
122. 105.
1932.
SHARK SUCKER.
Lent by the
artist.
1930.
Wood,
11 Vt x 30".
rod. wire.
61%"
h.
106.
ACROBATS.
1930. Bronze,
8%"
h.
125.
1939.
h.
107.
COW.
1930. Bronze,
8%"
h.
108.
DANCER.
1930. Bronze.
23%"
h.
TIIAXSITIOX TO MOTION
5%"
h.
109.
FEET
IN
THE
126.
FISH
1929. Wire.
15%"
h.
1930. Bronze,
5%"
h.
127.
MOTORIZED MOBILE.
Wood,
1929.
111.
HORSE
I.
1930. Bronze,
4V2 "
h.
Collection.
New
York.
1932.
112.
STARFISH.
Pittsfield.
Massachusetts.
113.
WEIGHT LIFTER.
1930. Bronze,
8%"
h.
129.
SEMI-CIRCLE.
Wood, metal
1932.
1930. Bronze,
4V
4 " h.
130.
c.
1932.
123.
c.
Collection
Pittsfield.
Massachusetts.
131. 124.
A UNIVERSE.
Collection
Gift of
40%"
h.
GIBRALTAR.
Lent by the
h.
The Museum
Modern
Art,
New York.
artist.
Abby Aldrich
Rockefeller.
115.
APPLE MONSTER.
Lent by the
artist.
1938.
h.
132.
1934.
116.
DOUBLE HELIX.
Lent by the
artist.
PANTOGRAPH,
Collection
c.
1934.
Wood,
117.
LENTIL.
Andrew Gagarin,
1944.
Litchfield, Connecticut.
134.
19%"
h.
118.
Bronze, 34%"
h.
119.
h.
136.
1938.
149.
THREE ANTENNAE.
Lent by the
artist.
40%".
wire, motor,
13%"
h.
150.
137.
EUCALYPTUS.
x 61".
1938.
h.
Private Collection,
New
York.
wire, cord,
14%"
151.
THE GONG.
Lent by the
1940.
wire, canvas, 7514 x
71%".
1941.
artist.
x 28".
152.
The Solomon
R.
1940.
110%
63%".
139.
Lent by the
artist.
153.
140.
c.
40%
x 30"
1943.
1946.
141.
QUATRO PENDULATE
Wood, sheet metal, metal
Lent by the
artist.
1943.
rods, motor, 36 7/a x 25 %".
155.
1947.
New
York.
MOBILES
Hanging MobilfN
142.
156.
PLAQUES SUR
Lent by the
artist.
157.
c.
47% x 56"
The Solomon
R.
1934.
158.
BLERIOT.
43%
x 47%".
143.
MOBILE. 1934?
Collection Collection
177.
c.
1953.
28%
x 66%".
Mary Reynolds:
New
York.
144.
MOBILE. 1935?
Collection Collection
159.
1954.
The Solomon
Mary Reynolds;
145.
1936.
160.
62%
x 84".
New
York.
New York.
161.
FOUR DIRECTIONS.
Lent by Perls Galleries.
37%
x 84%".
146.
New
York.
The Solomon
Mary Reynolds:
1936?
FLYING FISH.
MOBILE.
Collection
Collection
163.
1957.
The Solomon
R.
Mary Reynolds;
148.
MOBILE.
Collection Collection
164.
THIRD BLERIOT.
1958.
The Solomon
R.
73%
Y>rk.
58%".
Mary Reynolds:
New
165. 39
= 50.
105V.
178.
Ceiling Mobiles
Collection
B. Bellew.
Rochecorbon. France.
1950.
166.
BLACK CRESCENT.
Collection
Gift of
1960.
New York.
of Toronto.
328.
POLYCHROME
1-8.
New
York.
New Yirk.
Stsmding Mobiles
167.
SUMAC.
THE CIRCLE.
1935.
36%
x 31%".
RED PADDLES.
New
V>rk.
Agnes Rindge
Claflin.
176.
1963.
180.
SPIDER.
39%
x 65".
Lent by the
New York.
181.
168.
LITTLE LEAVES.
46%".
60%
x 59".
New \ork.
Wood.
wire. 22" h.
New
Yirk.
182.
330.
HORIZON WEEDS.
1943.
1963.
New York.
1963.
183.
LILY OF FORCE.
Lent by the
artist.
x82%"
169.
HORIZONTAL MOBILE.
184.
23%
x 23".
LARGE RED.
BLACK MOBILE, c.
Collection
1948.
36%
x 29%".
LARGE WHITE.
1963.
66%
x 178 3 4".
186.
POMEGRANATE.
Collection
X^
hitney
Museum
of
American
Art.
New Yirk.
86%
x 115".
172.
ROXBURY
RED.
New York.
1963.
187.
SHIELDS.
Lent by the
173.
188.
MOTHS.
New
York.
New \ork.
1951.
174.
1964.
189.
RED
DISC.
New
York.
175.
GHOST.
190.
RED PYRAMID.
51%
x 42".
New
York.
New York.
331.
x 46".
191.
THE SHOWER.
New
York.
New
York.
313.
A SWIRL OF SNOW.
207.
CONSTELLATION,
Lent by the
artist.
c.
1943.
Wood, metal
rods,
31%
x 36 5/s".
New York.
1959.
209.
193.
1943.
194.
BEGGAR'S PENNY.
1962.
208.
CONSTELLATION,
Collection Jean and
c.
1948.
Wood, metal
rods. 41 x 33".
50%
x 34%".
New York.
STABILES
Wall Mobiles
332.
211.
MORNING STAR.
Lent by the
artist.
ESCUTCHEON.
New
York.
212.
MORNING COBWEB.
Lent by the
artist.
35%"
h.
196.
ESCUTCHEON
Collection
II.
New Vork.
213.
35%"
h.
197.
ESCUTCHEON.
7%"
h.
198.
BLACK SPONGE.
New York.
New York.
214.
MONOCLE.
199.
1958.
h.
Connecticut.
New York.
27%"
h.
215.
RED CRESCENT,
Lent by the
artist.
c.
%" h.
200.
RED HEAD.
Collection Mr.
Illinois.
216.
201.
YELLOW WHALE.
Collection Jean and
217.
202.
FISHY.
%"
h.
New York.
1963. Sheet metal,
Sampson R.
Field.
New York.
218.
74%"
h.
New York.
Sheet metal,
CONSTELLATIONS
219. 203.
CONSTELLATION.
Collection
Collection
1943.
Wood, metal
rods, 22 x
44%".
69%"
h.
Mary Reynolds;
220.
BUCEPHALUS.
110%"
h.
1943.
12%
x 18".
221.
h.
205.
EBONY CONSTELLATION.
Lent by the
artist.
1943.
Wood, metal
rods,
22%
x 38"
222.
14%"
h.
New York.
206.
SMALL CONSTELLATION.
Lent by the
artist.
1943.
Wood, metal
rods, 14 x
48%"
223.
New
York.
STABILE-MOBILES
226.
TOWKIIS
1950.
241.
TOWER.
12% x 15%".
New
York.
New York.
242.
TOWER.
28%"
227.
1950?
New
York.
50%
68%".
243.
TOWER.
1951.
BLUE FEATHER.
Lent by the
artist.
1951.
New York.
x 44%".
230.
MOItl
>
Oil
MOM
MKMAI. SCULPTURE
metal, wire,
11%"
h.
231.
FLAMAND.
New York.
1962. Sheet metal, 23 7 /s x 18".
232.
1956.
New
York.
x 68%".
247.
HARTFORD.
45%".
333.
WHITE SIEVE.
13%
x 20".
New
York.
New York.
249.
1963.
234.
CRINKLY.
Lent by the
27%
x 25V4".
Lent by the
artist.
236.
CRINKLY.
37%
x 31V4".
New
\ork.
MISCELLANY
1964.
237.
250.
9%
x 60".
20%
x 15 %".
a.
36" h
b.
32%" h.
324.
1964.
19%
x 20".
New York.
130%".
252.
FISH.
c.
1950.
h.
glass,
13%"
238.
FIVE RUDDERS.
Connecticut.
RAT.
10%"
h.
Lent by the
253. 325.
12%"
h.
1964.
New York.
1964.
254.
Connecticut.
255.
RUG. Executed
Lent by the
New York.
artist.
I.ATK I.OI
\<
Ills AXI
273.
RED SPIRAL.
Lent by the
23%
28%".
artist.
Uonat'hps. waterrolors
257.
274.
SPIRAL. STAR
Lent by the
AND MOON.
23%
28%'
UNTITLED.
1961. Gouache,
Collection,
artist.
275.
GREEN MOON.
45% x28%".
UNTITLED.
1962. Watercolor, 26 7 /s x
New York.
51%".
276.
HERRINGBONE.
259.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
Collection,
277.
RED
DRIP.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
278.
SPINNAKER.
45%
x 35".
261.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
New \ork.
262.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache.
Tapestrips
All tapestries were executed in the workshops oi Aubusson,
263.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
New York.
29%
x
264.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
42%".
279.
ALPHABET.
Lent by the
1962. Tapestry,
20%
x 30%".
artist.
265.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
BLACK HEAD.
Lent by the
1962. Tapestry.
41%
x 29
8 ".
artist.
266.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache.
BLACK STARS.
Lent by the
artist.
1962. Tapestry. 78 x
58%".
267.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
BLUE BALLS.
Lent by the
1962. Tapestry,
15%
x 23".
New
York.
283.
artist.
268.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache.
42%
x 29%".
CADUCEUS.
Lent by the
1962. Tapestry,
28%
41%".
New
York.
284.
artist.
269.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
29%
42%".
MOSQUITO.
Lent by the
1962. Tapestry,
29%
41%".
artist.
270.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache.
43%".
285.
MOUTH.
1962. Tapestry.
artist.
29%
x 41%".
New York.
29%
x
Lent by the
271.
UNTITLED.
1964. Gouache,
42%".
286.
RED SUN.
Lent by the
334.
29%"
SIGNS.
1962. Tapestry,
artist.
15%
21%".
Lent by the
THK SOLOMON
R.
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
JANUARY
THE SOLOMON
R.
LOUIS