Discover the 'Alexander Calder Rug after The Iron Wizard 20th Century'. This handmade artistic tapestry is a true masterpiece. Woven from wool on a high-quality cotton backing, each piece is numbered 1/8, ensuring its exclusivity. With its generous dimensions of 300 x 200 cm, it will bring a touch of elegance and sophistication to any interior. Acquire a unique piece of art from the 'artist rugs' category that is both timeless and exquisite.
Alexander Calder | ![]() |
Born into an artistic family in Pennsylvania, Alexander Calder was encouraged to create and invent from a very young age. His parents set up a studio for him in the basement of the family home in California, where they had settled. The young boy was already passionate about movement and imagined becoming a mechanical engineer. In 1923, Sandy (as his parents nicknamed him) finally enrolled in an art school in New York. He had the ambition to become an artist. The city's ever-lively theater fascinated him. In 1926, he was in Paris, trying his luck as a painter and illustrator. A meeting with a toymaker of Serbian origin gave him new ideas: he began working with wire, making small animal toys, inspired by the drawings he made as a child in New York zoos. The sculptor was born! From these tinkerings, the artist created a world: it would become his Cirque Calder, with which he acquired a small notoriety. The figurines were animated by the artist, who played Monsieur Loyal. His articulated toys were exhibited at the Salon des Humoristes in 1927. At this time, he created wire portraits of his friends, such as Fernand Léger. He also became friends with the abstract painter Piet Mondrian, whose works he admired. Calder, in turn, decided to launch himself into abstract art... but by putting it into movement! His source of inspiration? The ballet of the stars and the cosmos. He joined the Abstraction-Création group founded by Auguste Herbin, Jean Hélion, and Georges Vantongerloo. It was Marcel Duchamp who, in 1932, found the right term to describe Alexander Calder's suspended sculptures: mobiles! Thanks to wire and an electrical system, balls and abstract shapes inspired by nature came to life. He also created works governed by an opposing principle, immobility. These would be the stabiles, whose base is firmly anchored to the ground. In some cases, the sculptor combined the two, uniting the aerial with the earthly, spontaneous change with immobile solidity. The artist exhibited his works in various prestigious circumstances (Museum of Art in 1943, Venice Biennale in 1952, etc.). The 1930s were fertile. Calder notably received a commission for a fountain (The Mercury Fountain), a symbol of resisManufacturing hand woven Materials Wool and cotton Cut 300x200cm Shapes Rectangular Thickness 4mm, flat Color red, orange, yellow, black Age 21st century Style Alexander Calder Bedroom living rooms, bedroom, dining room, office Similar Items | |