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Gagosien Quarterly

August 26, 2014

alexander calder: gouaches

While Alexander Calder is regarded as the originator of mobile art works, his works on paper exhibit a mastery of two-dimensional abstraction. With a show of his gouaches closing in the Davies Street, London gallery, Derek Blasberg celebrates some of the artist’s pieces that didn’t require a welding helmet.

Alexander Calder, Occident, 1975, gouache and ink on paper, 29 ½ × 43 ¾ inches (74.9 × 109.9 cm)

Alexander Calder, Occident, 1975, gouache and ink on paper, 29 ½ × 43 ¾ inches (74.9 × 109.9 cm)

Derek Blasberg

Derek Blasberg is a writer, fashion editor, and New York Times best-selling author. He has been with Gagosien since 2014, and is currently the executive editor of Gagosien Quarterly.

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Alexander Calder (1898–1976) once said, “I paint with shapes.” While the American artist is best known for his suspended abstract mobiles, it is his two-dimensional works of art that comprise two shows at Gagosien galleries in New York and London. (The New York show, at 980 Madison Avenue, runs May 8–June 14; the London show, at 17–19 Davies Street, runs June 10–August 29.)

Focusing on works done in gouache on paper, which was Calder’s preferred two-dimensional medium, the exhibitions will feature works from the 1940s as well as larger-scale works Calder created at the end of his life. At the time of their creation, Calder was splitting his time between homes in the United States and France. According to Millicent Wilner, who organized the Gagosien shows, “the influence of Calder’s contemporaries can be seen in the gouaches as he delved further into modernism and abstraction. We see the simplicity of colors coming from Mondrian, the playfulness of form from Miró, who was a great friend of Calder’s, as well as traces of Surrealism in a number of works.”

Alexander Calder: Gouaches

Alexander Calder, Untitled (Costume Design for Mêtaboles) VIII, 1969, gouache and ink on paper, 15 ⅜ × 11 ½ inches (39.1 × 29.2 cm)

The works in both exhibitions lend an insight into Calder’s working method, showing us not only how the artist came to create the mobiles and sculptures that have become synonymous with his name, but also how simple silhouettes informed his artistic vocabulary. While some of the works relate to completed and uncompleted structures, the gouaches exist as works of art in their own right. “They are perfect two-dimensional representations of Calder’s creative focus. His concern with primary color, abstraction, motion, and playfulness is evident,” says Wilner.

“The gouaches allowed him a much quicker, freer method of creation,” she observes. An integral part of Calder’s diverse and prolific oeuvre, these works reflect the ease with which the artist approached his creative process.

All artwork by © 2014 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Alexander Calder, Flying Dragon, 1975, installation view, Place Vendôme, Paris © 2021 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo: Thomas Lannes

Behind the Art
Alexander Calder: Flying Dragon

In this video, Gagosien director Serena Cattaneo Adorno celebrates the installation of Alexander Calder’s monumental sculpture Flying Dragon (1975) at Place Vendôme in Paris, detailing the process and importance of this ambitious project.

Alexander Calder poster for McGovern, 1972, lithograph

The Art History of Presidential Campaign Posters

Against the backdrop of the 2020 US presidential election, historian Hal Wert takes us through the artistic and political evolution of American campaign posters, from their origin in 1844 to the present. In an interview with Quarterly editor Gillian Jakab, Wert highlights an array of landmark posters and the artists who made them.

Black-and-white photograph of Alexander Calder and Margaret French dancing on a cobblestone street while Louisa Calder plays the accordion in front of a large window outside of James Thrall Soby’s house, Farmington, Connecticut, 1936

An Alphabetical Guide to Calder and Dance

Jed Perl takes a look at Alexander Calder’s lifelong fascination with dance and its relationship to his reimagining of sculpture.

Featuring Joan Jonas’s Mirror Piece 1 (1969) on its cover.

Now available
Gagosien Quarterly Summer 2020

The Summer 2020 issue of Gagosien Quarterly is now available, featuring Joan Jonas’s Mirror Piece 1 (1969) on its cover.

Charlotte Perriand in her studio on place Saint-Sulpice, Paris, 1928. The hands holding a plate halolike behind her head are Le Corbusier’s.

The New World of Charlotte Perriand

Inspired by a visit to the Fondation Louis Vuitton’s exhibition Charlotte Perriand: Inventing a New World, William Middleton explores the life of this modernist pioneer and her impact on the worlds of design, art, and architecture.

Calder: Sculpting A Life

Calder: Sculpting A Life

The first authorized biography of Alexander Calder was published this past fall. Biographer Jed Perl and Alexander “Sandy” S. C. Rower, president of the Calder Foundation, discuss the genesis of the book, the nature of genius, and preview what’s to come in the second volume with the Quarterly’s Wyatt Allgeier.

Gagosien Quarterly Spring 2018

Gagosien Quarterly Spring 2018

The Spring 2018 Gagosien Quarterly with a cover by Ed Ruscha is now available for order.

Painting of a person kneeling on the floor with crab claw hands

Tetsuya Ishida: My Weak Self, My Pitiful Self, My Anxious Self

The largest exhibition of the Japanese artist Tetsuya Ishida’s work ever mounted in the United States will open at Gagosien, New York, in September 2023. Curated by Cecilia Alemani, the show tracks the full scope of Ishida’s career. In this excerpt from Alemani’s essay in the exhibition catalogue, she contextualizes Ishida’s paintings against the background of a fraught era in Japan’s history and investigates the work’s enduring relevance in our own time.

Colorful painting of a person soaking in a bathtub

Come As You Are: Derrick Adams

Jewels Dodson visited artist Derrick Adams at his New York studio as he prepared for an exhibition of new paintings in Los Angeles in the fall of 2023. She reports on these works and on Adams’s embrace of joy, humor, and contradiction.

Jennifer Guidi’s Hawk Soars Skyward (Painted Natural Sand, Yellow-Orange-Pink Sky, Green, Purple and Black Mountains, Red, Blue, Purple, Turquoise, Yellow, Orange, Lavender and Green, Black Ground), 2023

Jennifer Guidi: Mountain Range

Invited to exhibit at Château La Coste in Provence, Jennifer Guidi created a new body of work that engaged with the cantilevered architecture of the gallery building, designed by Richard Rogers, and with the artistic heritage of the region. Amie Corry reports on the evolution of the exhibition and on its place within Guidi’s larger practice.

portrait of a person staring directly at the camera

Everywhere Light

Jake Skeets reflects on Richard Avedon’s series In the American West, focusing on the portrait of his uncle, Benson James.

A child stands behind a camera filming something out of the image frame, another child stands nearby to the right

The Bigger Picture
IntoUniversity

Precious Adesina charts the development of the UK-based nonprofit organization IntoUniversity.