Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. He has curated and collaborated on over 100 Calder exhibitions worldwide. The first authorized biography of Alexander Calder was published this past fall. Biographer Jed Perl and Alexander “Sandy” S. C. Rower, president of the Calder Foundation, discuss the genesis of the ...

    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people1
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people2
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people3
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people4
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people5
  2. Jan 8, 2018 · Calder was a pioneer of 20th-century sculpture, among the first to endow his works with a fourth dimension: movement. Duck (1909), which rocks back and forth on its curved underside, can be considered the artist’s first kinetic sculpture.

  3. Alexander Calder is known for inventing wire sculptures and the mobile, a type of kinetic art which relied on careful weighting to achieve balance and suspension in the air. Initially Calder used motors to make his works move, but soon abandoned this method and began using air currents alone.

    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people1
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people2
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people3
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people4
    • jessica calder artist biography photos of people5
  4. Oct 18, 2023 · An introduction to artist Alexander Calder, the American great who began ‘drawing in space’ before so memorably inventing the mobile

    • Alexander Calder was born in Philadelphia in 1898 to a family of artists. His mother was a painter, and his father, Alexander Stirling, and grandfather, Alexander Milne, were both well-established sculptors.
    • Technically, Calder’s first kinetic sculpture was of a duck, which he presented to his mother as a Christmas gift in 1909. It was made from a formed, brass sheet and rocked back and forth when touched.
    • Although Calder is known internationally as an artist, he initially studied mechanical engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NJ.
    • While working as an illustrator for the National Police Gazzette, Calder began taking evening drawing classes at the 42 Street New York Public School; a year later, he began studying painting at the Arts Students League with John Sloan and George Luks.
  5. He created Constellations, a series of airy three-dimensional stabiles of wire and carved wooden abstract shapes. In 1943, Calder was honored as the youngest artist ever to have a retrospective exhibition at the art world's most prestigious venue, New York's Museum of Modern Art.

  6. People also ask

  7. Oct 24, 2017 · The book includes images of metal sculptures of a dog and duck he created as a boy in 1909. But Calder tried hard to dodge heredity (his father and grandfather were successful sculptors and his mother was also a talented artist) by studying engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey.

  1. People also search for