ALEXANDER CALDER (1898-1976)
ALEXANDER CALDER (1898-1976)
ALEXANDER CALDER (1898-1976)
3 更多
ALEXANDER CALDER (1898-1976)
6 更多
ALEXANDER CALDER (1898-1976)

Untitled

细节
ALEXANDER CALDER (1898-1976)
Untitled
incised with the artist's monogram 'CA' (on the largest element)
hanging mobile—sheet metal, wire and paint
21 ¼ x 39 x 17 ½in. (54 x 99 x 44.5 cm.)
Executed circa 1947
来源
Frederick D. Brown Collection, St. Croix.
Private Collection.
Anon. sale, Sotheby’s, New York, 16 November 1995, lot 250.
Private Collection, Aspen.
Anon. sale, Christie’s New York, 14 November 2012, lot 68.
Ruth O’Hara Fine Art, New York.
Venus Over Manhattan, New York.
Private Collection, Beverly Hills.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2017.
出版
Alexander Calder: A Retrospective Exhibition, exh. cat., New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1964 (studio view illustrated, p. 20).
A. Calder and J. Davidson, Calder, an Autobiography with Pictures, New York 1966 (studio view illustrated, p. 172).
H. H. Arnason, Calder, New York 1971 (studio view illustrated, p. 18).
J. Lipman, Calder’s Universe, New York 1976 (studio view illustrated, pp. 22-23).
Alexander Calder: Selected Works 1932-1972, exh. cat., New York, O'Hara Gallery, 1994 (studio view illustrated on the front cover).
P. E. Guerrero, Calder at Home: The Joyous Environment of Alexander Calder, New York 1998 (illustrated in colour, p. 9; studio view illustrated in colour, pp. 28-29).
Motion-Emotion: The Art of Alexander Calder, exh. cat., New York, O'Hara Gallery 1999 (studio view illustrated in colour, pp. 82-83).
Calder: Gravity and Grace, exh. cat., Bilbao, Museo Guggenheim Bilbao, 2003 (studio view illustrated, pp. 40 and 102).
P. E. Guerrero, A Photographer’s Journey, New York 2007 (studio view illustrated, pp. 176-177).
Alexander Calder: Radical Inventor, exh. cat., Montreal, The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, 2018-2019 (studio view illustrated in colour, p. 4).
展览
New York, James Goodman Gallery, Calder: Space in Play, 2014.
更多详情
This work is registered in the archives of the Calder Foundation, New York, under application number A13320.

荣誉呈献

Michelle McMullan
Michelle McMullan Senior Specialist, Co-Head of Evening sale

拍品专文

While he is celebrated for his use of bold colours, some of Alexander Calder’s most engaging works are his monochrome mobiles. With its dramatic black forms that appear to hover effortlessly in mid-air, Untitled (1947) is an outstanding example of this important facet of the artist’s career. The beauty of the work lies in its simplicity. From the formal purity of the dark shapes to the sublime gracefulness of their movement, it demonstrates both Calder’s technical mastery and his unrivalled eye for aesthetic detail. It is also a remarkable example of his use of pierced sheet metal in mobile format, capturing the new material freedom that blossomed in his work after the end of the Second World War. Seen in an iconic studio photograph taken in 1963, the present work remained in Calder’s collection for almost two decades.

The mobile is structured along a central spine, with wires that extend freely in all directions. While two pierced discs punctuate the bottom of the mobile, the arms reach upwards and outwards, making use of their three-dimensional area. The mobile’s open shape and lively, expansive beauty activate the surrounding space. Calder did not see volume as a purely solid mass: here, volume is determined by the total space within the mobile’s range. The biomorphic shapes of the black discs bring to mind the work of Joan Miró and Paul Klee—although Calder developed along a singular trajectory. From below, the forms hover on the air, while a side view reveals how he has suspended another element such that it appears to leap in an upward direction. Calder endows the mobile and the surrounding space with metaphorical and literal freedom.

Calder considered viewpoints in multiple dimensions. In some ways, his formal concerns for his work being observed ‘in the round’ align with those of traditional sculptors. Yet the experience of viewing the present mobile departs from convention, with its form appearing strikingly different from various angles. It looks elegantly vertiginous if seen from the side. From below, the concentration of black discs is visually arresting, and the shapes appear to float beside one another on one horizontal plane. The work was executed at the pinnacle of Calder’s work in all-black sculpture, which he made from the late 1930s to the early 1960s. He considered colour secondary to his mobiles’ movement. With the monochrome simplicity of the present work, Calder highlights its strong silhouettes, complicated construction, and patterns of motion around a central axis.

By the 1940s, Calder—born in Pennsylvania to an artistic family in 1898—was an artist of international renown, exhibiting widely on both sides of the Atlantic. He had become a fully-fledged member of the Paris avant-garde during the previous decade, befriending artists including Marcel Duchamp, Fernand Léger, Hans Arp, Le Corbusier, Theo van Doesburg and Joan Miró. It was a 1930 visit to Piet Mondrian’s studio, however, that had proved his most formative encounter, signalling a shift to abstraction. The environment featured coloured cardboard rectangles tacked to the wall for compositional experimentation, creating a circumambient space of abstract shape in black, white and primary colours. ‘I suggested to Mondrian that perhaps it would be fun to make these rectangles oscillate’, Calder recalled. ‘… This one visit gave me a shock that started things’ (A. Calder in Jean Davidson, ed., Calder: An Autobiography with Pictures, New York, 1966, p. 113). His first mobiles, made of materials including wire, sheet metal and wood, soon followed.

When the wartime rationing of sheet metal ended in 1945, Calder was able to return to the medium with a renewed interest, now piercing his metal discs. The present mobile’s cut-out pieces create a lyrical effect with their suggestion of weightlessness. By heightening its sense of transparency and surface animation, Calder manipulated the visual and physical weight of the entire structure. Placing the largest elements at the base of the mobile, he ingeniously fashioned shapes so that they appear to be cut out from these lower, larger discs in a careful consideration of balanced weight. The discs seem to be floating upwards away from their voids. ‘For though the lightness of a pierced or serrated solid or surface is extremely interesting’, Calder said, ‘the still greater lack of weight of deployed nuclei is much more so’ (A. Calder, ‘A Propos of Measuring a Mobile’, manuscript, 1943, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.).

更多来自 二十及二十一世纪:伦敦晚间拍卖

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