紐約,佳士得,2005 年 11 月 1 日,拍品編號 329
美國中西部私人收藏(購自上述拍賣)
Tapis de maîtres, Galerie Lucie Weill-Seligmann, Paris, 1985, similar example pl. 4
Teppiche: Arp, Bissier, Calder, Léger..., Galerie Beyeler, Basel, 1961
Contemporary French tapestries, Charles Slatkin Galleries Inc., New York, 1965, p. 11
Jean Lipman, Calder’s Universe, New York, 1976, p. 160
Sarah B. Sherill, Tapis d'Occident, Abbeville Press, New York and Paris 1995, p. 373
Jacques Sirat and Françoise Siriex, Tapis Français u XXe siècle, Ed. de l'Amateur, Paris, 1993, p. 92
American • 1898 - 1976
Alexander Calder worked as an abstract sculptor and has been commonly referred to as the creator of the mobile. He employed industrious materials of wire and metal and transformed them into delicate geometric shapes that respond to the wind or float in air. Born into a family of sculptors, Calder created art from childhood and moved to Paris in 1926, where he became a pioneer of the international avant-garde. In addition to his mobiles, Calder produced an array of public constructions worldwide as well as drawings and paintings that feature the same brand of abstraction. Calder was born in Lawnton, Pennsylvania.
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