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Saturday, October 18, 2025 |
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Whitney Museum celebrates a century of Alexander Calder's iconic Circus with a dedicated exhibition |
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Alexander Calder, Mr. Loyal, Ringmaster, Red Fabric, and Ring from Calder's Circus, 1926-31. Wire, cloth, leather, cardboard, cork, paper, rhinestones, fabric, and painted wood, dimensions variable. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. © 2025 Calder Foundation, New York / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph by Jens Mortensen.
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NEW YORK, NY.- The Whitney Museum of American Arts exhibition High Wire: Calders Circus at 100, which opens on October 18, celebrates the centennial of one of the most cherished and storied works in the Whitneys collection, Alexander Calders magnificent Calders Circus (192631). With over 100 wire sculptures and objects, Calders Circus highlights the themes of movement, balance, suspense, and ephemerality that would later define the artists signature mobiles. High Wire is the Whitneys first exhibition dedicated to Calders Circus since moving to 99 Gansevoort and commemorates the artists innovation and the enduring impact this work has had on twentieth-century art.
While living as a young American artist in Paris in 1926, Calder began to build his Circus using everyday materials and found objects, creating a cast of characters that he would set in motion and narrate as a multi-act performance. Calder staged these presentations in informal settings, often for friends and artist peers. Designed to be portable, Calders Circus evolved over time as he continued to perform the work in Europe and America for decades. The exhibition brings together the iconic Calders Circus alongside wire sculptures, drawings, paintings, early abstractions, archival materials, and film to offer a view into the techniques and innovations that would define his career. Featured in the show are works from the Whitneys collection, along with select loans from the Calder Foundation, New York.
In Calders Circus, we find the essence of Calders brilliance: an artistic spectacle that is modest in scale but contains so much drama and humanity. He imagined and animated everyday materialsbits of fabric, cork, found wood, rubber tubes, and perhaps most importantly, wirein a project that is at once performance, sculpture, and theater, a precursor to much of what we think of as experimental art today, said Jennie Goldstein, the Whitneys recently named Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Curator of the Collection. Were thrilled for the opportunity to present this work in all its splendor, which we hope will inspire new audiences, young and old, to experience Calders innovation, added Roxanne Smith, Jennifer Rubio Assistant Curator of the Collection.
Few works have been as important to the Whitney as Calder's Circus, a work that has captivated artists and audiences for decades, said Kim Conaty, Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator at the Whitney. We look forward to celebrating its milestone anniversary by offering new perspectives on this foundational work, highlighting Calder's material innovations and radical performativity by placing it alongside the artist's developments in drawing and painting, abstraction and wire sculpture.
High Wire: Calders Circus is on view October 18March 2025 at the Whitney Museum. The exhibition is organized by Jennie Goldstein, the inaugural Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Curator of the Collection, and Roxanne Smith, Jennifer Rubio Assistant Curator of the Collection.
Exhibition Overview High Wire: Calders Circus at 100
High Wire: Calders Circus at 100 celebrates the centennial of one of Alexander Calders most iconic works and one of the most beloved in the Whitneys collection, Calders Circus (1926 31). This exhibition brings together over 100 objects from this installation, along with more than twenty related works, including wire sculptures, drawings, paintings, early abstractions, archival materials, and film.
In 1926, Calder began constructing his miniature multi-act spectacle while living in Paris, using commonplace materialswire, fabric, cork, wood, string, and found objectsto create a cast of acrobats, animals, and other circus performers, including clowns, a sword swallower, and a ringmaster. The figures were brought to life through performances that Calder staged for audiences of artists and friends on both sides of the Atlantic, among them Marcel Duchamp, Joan Miró, Piet Mondrian, and Isamu Noguchi. These dynamic performances were set to music, complete with lighting and narration by Calder, and could last up to two hoursrepresenting a radical new form of performance art. Over time, the number of figures, props, and tools expanded to fill five suitcases. Calder used them to transport not only the performers, but also the instruments, phonographic records, and repair materialscaps for the cap pistols, strings, fabric, sewing kits, pliers, and wiresmaking the performance fully portable and true to its theatrical ephemerality.
A touchstone for Calders artistic development, Calders Circus reveals his early fascination with movement, balance, suspense, and ephemeralityconcepts that would shape his pioneering invention of the mobile and define his sculptural practice in the decades that followed. This exhibition situates the Circus within Calders experimental engagement with this popular form, drawing connections between its energetic interplay and his later abstract works. To tell the broader story of Calders Circus, the exhibition includes a range of related materials that illuminate the works evolution and performance history, along with a 1961 film on view in the galleries. Calder collaborated with filmmaker Carlos Vilardebó to capture the artists final full performance of the Circus, more than thirty years after the works inception. Staged in his studio in Saché, France, Calder acted as ringmaster to bring the figures to life while his wife, Louisa, provided music on a gramophone. Also on view are wire sculptures Calder created of circus subjects during the 1920s, in which he transcribes in wire the volume and essence of the body in motion, and his ink drawings of circus performers from 193132, which translate his sculptural wire language onto paper. The exhibition also features a display of Calder's first standing mobiles and stabiles, the non-objective sculptures for which he is best known, marking an important turning point in his work directly following the Circus. These early abstract constructions reveal how the dynamics of chance, motion, and action inherent to the Circus would manifest throughout the rest of his career. The objects on view are accompanied by archival materials and performance ephemera, including photographs and handmade invitations, and the original suitcases, tools, and sound recordings from the Circus, which together offer an intimate look at the artists process and the performative, kinetic ingenuity that defined his early practice.
The Whitney holds a special relationship with Calder and his legacy. Calders Circus entered the Museums collection in 1983 following a major public acquisition campaign. Launched in 1982, the campaign drew support from institutions and individuals across the country, enabling the Museum to acquire the work, which has been a highlight of its holdings ever since. This successful effort ensured Calders Circus remained in New York City in a public museum, preserving the artists beloved work for future generations. The Whitney is the largest public repository of Calders work and hosted his major retrospective in 1976.
Organized to commemorate one hundred years since the inception of Calders Circus, this exhibition offers a rare opportunity to experience the full scope of a work that continues to enchant audiences and illuminate the foundations of Calders visionary practice.
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