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Alexander Calder, Uxmal, 1975


Signed Alexander Calder, Unique Gouache, Uxmal, 1975

Calder Unique Gouache Signed, Uxmal, 1975

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Artist: Calder, Alexander (1898 - 1976)
Title: Uxmal, 1975
Medium:
Unique Original Color Calder Gouache
Image Size: 30 1/2 in x 22 5/8 in (77.5 cm x 57.5 cm)
Sheet Size: 30 1/2 in x 22 5/8 in (77.5 cm x 57.5 cm)
Framed Size: 44 in x 37 9/16 in (111.8 cm x 95.4 cm)
Signed: Hand-signed and dated by Alexander Calder (Pennsylvania, 1898 - New York, 1976) in black gouache in the lower right: 'Calder 75'.
Edition: A unique original work registered as an authentic work by Calder in the archives of the Calder Foundation, New York, under application number A16630.
Condition: This work is in excellent condition with bold, bright colors.
Price 

Item# 2793
$125,000 Submit Best Offer

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Historical Description:
The Pyramid of the Magicians is a monumental structure that stands tall amidst the ruins of Uxmal, a pre-Columbian city of the Maya civilization. In this unique work, Calder (Pennsylvania, 1898 - New York, 1976) pays hommage to the Mayans and their brilliant architectural talent by simply, yet exquisitely, depicting the Pyramid of the Musicians. Utilizing diagonal, intersecting lines that rise up from the bottom corners and meet at the center of the composition, Calder creates a triangular pyramid that appears as if woven together. Two circles, one blue and one red, rest in the sky to either side of the pyramid. Their brilliant colors contrast with the simple black lines of the pyramid, causing the figures to pop and contributing to a sense of depth, as if the pyramid defines the skyline and the two circular forms are hovering in the distance, beyond the monumental structure.

Created in 1975, this work is hand-signed and dated by Alexander Calder (Pennsylvania, 1898 - New York, 1976) in black gouache in the lower right 'Calder 75.' This is a unique original work and its authenticity has been confirmed by the Calder Foundation (archive number A16630).

About the Framing:
Museum-grade conservation framed in complementary moulding with silk mats and optical grade Plexiglas.

Style: Contemporary 20th Century Modern American Master, stabiles, mobiles and tapestries
 

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  • Calder, Uxmal, 1975
  • Calder, Germination, 1962
  • Calder, Composition with Five Balloons, c. 1970
  • Calder, Sketch for 'The X & Its Tails'. 1967
  • Calder, Untitled ‘Liz Nelson’, 1944 [A.24443]
  • Calder, Circus, c. 1973-4
  • Calder, Untitled
  • Calder, Composition with Pyramids, Circles and Clouds, 1970
  • Calder, Untitled (Circles and Lines), 1968
  • Calder, Two Disques and Half
  • Calder, Black Sun
  • Calder, Untitled
  • Calder, Sun and Moon
  • Calder, Red and Blue Swirl
  • Calder, Pyramide Rouge (Red Pyramid), 1969
  • Calder, Untitled (Star, Moon, and Spirals)
  • Calder, Composition with Clouds and Spheres
  • Calder, Butterflies and Spiral, 1975
  • Calder, Dark Pyramid, 1977
  • Calder, Sun Face (Homage to the Sun)
  • Calder, Composition with Circles and Tubes, c. 1970
  • Calder, My Onions
  • Calder, Untitled Spiral
  • Calder, Tamanoir jaune (Yellow Tamanoir), c. 1963
  • Calder, Untitled Sun & Moon
  • Calder, Untitled Stabile
  • Calder, Lo Oscuro Invade
  • Calder, Le crâne dans le nid (The Skull in the Nest), 1961
  • Calder, Music Maestro Please, c. 1975
  • Calder, Balloons, c. 1960
  • Calder, Sala Gaspar, c. 1970

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Biography of Alexander Calder

Alexander CalderAlexander Calder (1898 - 1976)

Alexander Calder was born July 22, 1898, in Lawnton, Pennsylvania, into a family of artists. In 1919, he received an engineering degree from Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken. Calder attended the Art Students League, New York, from 1923 to 1926, studying briefly with Thomas Hart Benton and John Sloan, among others. As a freelance artist for the National Police Gazette in 1925, he spent two weeks sketching at the circus; his fascination with the subject dates from this time. He also made his first sculpture in 1925; the following year he made several constructions of animals and figures with wire and wood. The first exhibition of Calder paintings took place in 1926 at the Artist’s Gallery, New York. Later that year, he went to Paris and attended the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. In Paris, he met Stanley William Hayter, exhibited at the 1926 Salon des Indépendants, and in 1927 began giving performances of his miniature circus. The first show of his wire animals and caricature portraits was held at the Weyhe Gallery, New York, in 1928. That same year, he met Joan Miró, who became his lifelong friend. Subsequently, Calder divided his time between France and the United States. In 1929, the Galerie Billiet gave him his first solo show in Paris. He met Frederick Kiesler, Fernand Léger, and Theo van Doesburg and visited Piet Mondrian’s studio in 1930. Calder began to experiment with abstract sculpture at this time and in 1931 and 1932 introduced moving parts into his work. These moving sculptures were called “mobiles”; the stationary constructions were to be named “stabiles.” He exhibited with the Abstraction-Création group in Paris in 1933. In 1943, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, gave him a solo exhibition.

During the 1950s, Calder traveled widely and executed Towers (wall mobiles) and Gongs (sound mobiles). He won the Grand Prize for Sculpture at the 1952 Venice Biennale. Late in the decade, Calder worked extensively with gouache; from this period, he executed numerous major public commissions. In 1964–65, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, presented a Calder retrospective. He began the Totems in 1966 and the Animobiles in 1971; both are variations on the standing mobile. A Calder exhibition was held at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, in 1976. Alexander Calder died November 11, 1976, in New York.

Alexander Calder created a piece called "WTC Stabile", which was placed in front of 7 World Trade Center, one of the buildings on the perimeter of the World Trade Center plaza. Due to the attacks on September 11, 2001, the piece was destroyed by the collapse of 7 World Trade Center.

According to the Library of Congress, "About 30 percent of the Calder piece was recovered, thanks to flyers describing it that were handed out to recovery workers at Ground Zero by Calder's grandson. Wenegrat said the artwork cannot be restored, but its pieces may come back to life in a different form. Wenegrat said the value of these destroyed pieces, as well as those in other World Trade Center public places, is estimated at $15 million."

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