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Wednesday, April 15, 2026 |
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| Fondation Louis Vuitton to host major Alexander Calder retrospective to mark double anniversary |
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Alexander Calder, Black Widow, 1948. Sheet metal, wire and paint, 325,1 x 251,5 cm. Instituto de Arquitetos do BrasilDepartamento de São Paulo. On deposit from the artist, 1948. © 2026 Calder Foundation, New York / ADAGP, Paris.Photo: Tim Nighswander / IMAGING4ART. Courtesy of Calder Foundation, New York / Art Resource, New York.
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PARIS.- From April 15 to August 16, 2026, the Fondation Louis Vuitton will celebrate the centenary of Alexander Calders (18981976) arrival in France in 1926 and fifty years since his death with a retrospective that explores all facets of his oeuvre. Calder. Rêver en Équilibre* spans half a century of creation, from the late 1920s and the first staging of the artists Cirque Calder performances that captivated the Parisian avant-garde, to the monumental sculptures that redefined public art in the 1960s and 1970s. At the Fondation Louis Vuitton, Calders mobilesfloating within Frank Gehrys architecturetransform the exhibition into a choreographed dance.
One of the most important exhibitions ever dedicated to Alexander Calder, Calder. Rêver en Équilibre has been conceived in close collaboration with the Calder Foundation, its principal lender. The display also features loans from international institutions and leading private collectors, bringing together nearly 300 works: stabiles and mobilesto use the Calderian terminology for static and kinetic abstractionsas well as wire portraits, carved wooden figures, paintings, drawings, and even jewelry, designed as unique sculptures. Throughout the chronological journey spanning more than 3,000 m2, the exhibition will highlight Calders fundamental artistic concerns: movement above all, but also light, reflection, humble materials, sound, the ephemeral, gravity, performance, and the interplay of positive and negative space.
The anniversary exhibition is enriched by contributions from Calders contemporaries. Works by the artists friends Jean Arp, Barbara Hepworth, Jean Hélion, and Piet Mondrian, as well as Paul Klee and Pablo Picasso, will situate Calders radical inventiveness within the avant- garde movement. Thirty-four photographs taken by some of the most important photographers of the 20th centuryHenri Cartier-Bresson, André Kertész, Gordon Parks, Man Ray, Irving Penn, and Agnès Varda, among otherswill show an artist walking a tightrope between art and life. Calder. Rêver en Équilibre will also feature focused presentations dedicated to key bodies of Calders work, including his beloved Constellation series and his dynamic jewelry.
In line with previous monographic exhibitions dedicated to major 20th and 21st century figures such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Joan Mitchell, Charlotte Perriand, Mark Rothko, David Hockney, Gerhard Richterthe Fondation Louis Vuitton is dedicating all of its exhibition spaces, and for the first time its adjoining lawn, to Calders work. In doing so, the exhibition initiates a dialogue between Calders volumes, planes and movements and those of Frank Gehrys architecture.
In his mid-20s, Alexander Calder reconnected with his familys artistic legacy (son of a painter and sculptor, grandson of a sculptor) by turning first to painting and drawing. After studying at the Art Students League of New York, he moved to Paris in 1926. In the Montparnasse district, then the epicenter of the international art world, he quickly became part of a thriving creative community. There he presented innovative worksfigurative and minimalist wire sculptures that drew critical praiseand a miniature circus. Thanks to an exceptional loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art, the first in 15 years, the Cirque Calder is returning to Paris, the city where it was made. At the heart of this innovative body of performance art, Calder orchestrated miniature acrobats, clowns, and equestrians for ever-growing audiences. Fernand Léger, Jean Hélion, Le Corbusier, Jean Arp, Joan Miró and Piet Mondrian were among the spectators.
Calders visit to Mondrians studio in 1930, where he was deeply impressed by the environmental installation, marked a decisive shift toward abstraction, first in painting and then in sculpture. Marcel Duchamp suggested the name mobile in 1931 for Calders kinetic abstract compositions, which were presented by the artist in 1932 at the Galerie Vignon in Paris. Initially powered mechanically and later set in motion by the slightest breeze, these works drew their life from the indistinct life of the atmosphere, as Jean-Paul Sartre wrote in 1946. Notably, in response to Duchamps terminology, Arp proposed the term stabile for Calders static objects of the early 1930s.
Although Calder returned to the United States in 1933, he continued to travel to Europe, notably participating in the Spanish Republic Pavilion in 1937 alongside Miró and Picasso. He returned to France after the war and established a studio in the hamlet of Saché in the Loire Valley in 1953. With one foot in each country, Calder expanded the very definition of sculpture until his death in 1976. Through movement, certainly, but also through a dynamic vocabulary deployed across all scalesfrom delicate metal assemblages animated by the slightest breath to monumental constructionshe created nonobjective sculptures that simultaneously existed in parallel with nature. As Dieter Buchhart and Anna Karina Hofbauer, the guest curators of the exhibition, comment: Calders innovative approach expanded the dimensions of sculpture to include time as an essential fourth dimension.
*Calder. Dreaming in Equilibrium.
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