- 21
Alexander Calder
Description
- Alexander Calder
- Deux Ailes Bleues
- signed with the artist's monogram and dated 66 on the largest white element
-
painted metal and wire hanging mobile
- 100 by 145 by 70cm.
- 39 3/8 by 57 by 27 1/2 in.
- This work is registered in the archives of the Calder Foundation, New York, under application number A09668.
Provenance
Galerie Maeght, Paris
Acquired directly from the above in 1968
Exhibited
Saint-Paul de Vence, Fondation Maeght, Calder, 1969, p. 111, no. 240b, illustrated in colour
Humlebæk, Louisiana Museum of Art, Calder, 1969 p. 23, no. 199, illustrated in a group photograph in colou🍌r
Literature
Gualtieri di San Lazzaro, ed., 'Hommage to Calder', in: XXe Siécle Review (Special Edition), Paris, 1972, p. 104, illustrated
Condition
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."
Catalogue Note
"When everything goes right a mobile is a piece of poetry that dances with the joy of life and surprise." (The artist in: Jacob Baal-Teshuva, Calder, Cologne 2002, p. 47)
Executed at the height of Alexander Calder's mature career, Deux Ailes Bleues is paradigmatic of his exceptional sculptural dexterity and unique aesthetic of suspended forms, hanging and moving in a sublime metallic ballet of ever-changing composition. The individual painted metal sheets render the composite elements as discrete volumes of colour in space. The movement of these intensely bright and contrasting elements is determined by the air around them as they interact with their three-dimensional space. Renowned for their outstanding beauty and craftsmanship, the sculptures of Calder are testament to his technical skill, imaginative genius and talent for organic composition and in these respects the present work is outstanding.
Deux Ailes Bleues truly embodies the artist's fully-evolved technique, style and artistic identity. Calder had been grappling with the questions of how to depict abstract forms in three-dimensional space since being in Paris in the 1930s. His resultant aesthetic dialect stemmed from the invention of new types of sculptural constructs that harmoniously integrated solid shapes with linear, ethereal elements. Calder attributed his decision to work in the abstract to his visit in October 1930 to Piet Mondrian's studio. Shortly following this cathartic encounter, Calder asked "Why must art be static? You look at an abstraction, sculpted or painted, an entirely exciting arrangement of planes, spheres, nuclei, entirely without meaning. It would be perfect but it is always still. The next step in sculpture is motion" (the artist in: 'Objects to Art Being Static, So He Keeps it in Motion', New York World-Telegram, 11th June, 1932).
Thus his sculptures abandoned the domain of the plinth, which had traditionally elevated sculpture to a rarefied realm beyond the viewer, to leap into an indeterminate space that engaged the viewer directly in suspension.
Calder wielded his pliers with remarkable skill and ingenuity to forge revolutionary genres of sculpture that brought motion to his work with a vengeance. In 1932 Marcel Duchamp christened Calder's early mechanized wire works as 'mobiles', a term that would soon apply to Calder's hanging sculptures, which did not require an engine to generate movement. Later Jean Arp coined the term 'stabiles': by breaking down the boundaries of existing sculpture, Calder's groundbreaking work required a new descriptive lexicon. Having revelled in the challenges of harmonizing sculptural design with technical concerns and site-specific parameters and winning the Grand Prize in sculpture at the Venice Biennale in 1952 for his innovative and ingenious use of sheet metal, Calder became consumed by the possibilities of three-dimensional movement via the hanging mobile format.
Calder intentionally reduced his palette, following the lead of Mondrian, primarily to black and white and strong primaries; calculating counterpoints in red, yellow, and blue, and conscious that colour relationships have a kinetic quality that adds a sense of weight and movement to individual pieces. In Deux Ailes Bleues balance is struck between the various organic shapes by constantly evolving and rescinding colour-relationships, depending on the spatial relationships between the various sheets. White counterbalances black, or sets off the intense red and yellow: the two blue wing-shaped elements anchor the horizontal axis of the work, reflecting the verticality of the highest white shape, whilst also providing a terminus to the cascading sequence of red metal sails. As is reflective of his very best works, Deux Ailes Bleues demonstrates Calder's capacity to orientate the movement of his mobiles according to both horizontal and vertical axes to heighten the sense of surface animation and adjustments between the bold hues. By piercing individual plates Calder has manipulated both the visual and physical weight of the mobile. As the artist explained "When I cut out my plates, I have two things in mind. I want them to be more alive, and I think about balance. Which explains the holes in the plates. The most important thing is that the mobile be able to catch the air. It has to be able to move" (the artist in: 'Hommage à Calder', in XXe siecle, Paris 1972, p. 98).
When he visited a 1946 exhibition of Calder's work in Paris, Jean-Paul Sartre described the amazing potency of the artist's mobiles: "Sculpture suggests movement, painting suggests depth or light. A 'mobile' does not 'suggest' anything; it captures genuine living movements and shapes them. 'Mobiles' have no meaning, make you think of nothing but themselves. They are, that is all; they are absolutes" (Jean-Paul Sartre in: Exhibition Catalogue, Paris, Galerie Louis Carré, Alexander Calder, 1946). However, despite Sartre's Existentialist view of Calder's work as devoid of any relative context, Calder himself acknowledged influences from the natural world. Leaves, branches, flowers, and animals serve as inspiration for Calder's abstract yet organic forms, and appear in many of the titles of his sculptures. Nevertheless, free of overt subject matter narrative content, Calder's mobiles interact with the viewer and their own environment in a completely innovative manner, much of their attraction being generated by their inherent physical properties. Asked to define his artistic approach, Calder again evoked the importance of his visit to Mondrian's studio: "Each thing I make has, according to its degree of success, a plastic quality, which includes many things – the mass or masses; the sinuosity; the contrast of black to white; the contrast of somberness to colour; whatever element of movement there is in the object, even its manner of suspension" (the artist cited in: Margaret Bruening, 'Calder mobiles and stabiles', in American Magazine of Art, no. 32, June 1939, p. 361). Deux Ailes Bleues is a wonderful example of these "many things" and represents t🐠he very best features in balance, colour, design and movement of Calder's inspir⛎ational language of hanging sculpture.