DENVER, CO.- Denver Botanic Gardens survey of iconic American artist Alexander Calders bold sculptures Calder: Monumental is on view April 28 September 24, 2017 at the Gardens York Street location. It is the first outdoor show of Calders work in the west and the first solo outdoor exhibition in the U.S. in more than a decade.
Calder devoted much of his later working years to monumental sculptures, many of which were public commissions. Calders monumental works are made of industrial materials and bolted steel plates. In addition to the outdoor sculptures, one indoor mobile in monumental scale is presented in the Boettcher Memorial Center, on loan from the Denver Art Museum. The featured abstract and figurative sculptures span from 19561976.
Calder: Monumental is guest curated by Alfred Pacquement, Honorary Director, Musée National dArt Moderne, Centre Pompidou in Paris, and organized in conjunction with the Calder Foundation, New York. Lenders to the exhibition include: Calder Foundation, Denver Art Museum, Smithsonians Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Museum of Fine Arts Houston and Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum.
Alexander Calder (18981976) is celebrated as a titan of modern sculpture. He first gained recognition in the 1920s in Paris for his work of performance art Cirque Calder (192631). At the same time, Calder invented wire sculpture, moving volumes that could be seen from all angles. After turning to abstraction in 1930, Calder invented another new form of sculpture, the mobile, so-termed by artist Marcel Duchamp. As Calders renown grew, he received commissions from cities and museums around the world for monumental sculptures of the type exhibited at the Gardens, making Calder the first truly international artist as well as one of the first to embrace public sculpture as an important element of civic life.