Quality: Every item in our archival print collection is a digital reproduction sourced from the original artwork hanging in the museum. Essentially, there is no way to get a more accurate and representative reproduction of the original art.
All items are published on 300gsm archival cotton rag paper, using the highest quality inksets available today.
Authorized Reproductions: All unframed prints are published with the museum logo watermark in the border. This custom touch proves that the item is a museum authorized reproduction of the original artwork.
A portion of every purchase from 1000Museums goes to support the arts and our partner museums.
ALEXANDER CALDER BIOGRAPHY
Calder, Alexander 1898–1976, American sculptor, b. Philadelphia; son of a prominent sculptor, Alexander Stirling Calder. Among the most innovative modern sculptors, Calder was trained as a mechanical engineer. In 1930 he went to Paris and was influenced by the art of Mondrian and Miró. In 1932 he exhibited his first brightly colored constellations, called mobiles, consisting of painted cut-out shapes connected by wires and set in motion by wind currents. The Museum of Modern Art, New York City, has several examples. These buoyant inventions and his witty wire portraits, his colorful and complex miniature zoo (1925; Whitney Mus., New York City), and his immobile sculptures known as stabiles, have brought Calder world renown. Many of his later works are huge, heavy, and delicately balanced mobiles produced for public buildings throughout the world. Calder is also noted for his book illustrations and stage sets. He had studios in Roxbury, Conn., and Paris.