Alexander Calder, a color lithograph from "La Mémoire Élémentaire", signed and numbered 21/100.
Untitled. Executed c. 1976. Published by Éditions de la Différence, Paris; printed by Arts-Litho, Paris. Japon nacré paper 52 x 100 cm.
Time staining. Full sheet visible. Mounted along edges with tape on verso, time staining on the front from the mounting in places along the edges. Lower edge deckled. General appearance good.
Alexander Calder was an American Sculptor and artist born in Philadelphia. He initially studied mechanical engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, but later changed to study at the Art Students League in New York and at Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris. When Calder visited Piet Mondrian’s studio in Paris, the artist felt immense inspiration, facilitating the creation of his abstract art and his joining of the group "Abstraction-Création". He is well known for his Chinese sculptures, and artworks Marcel Duchamp dubbed as “mobiles”. As well as sculptures, Calder also illustratedbooks and magazines at the same time as he also made jewellery. Calder explored the dynamics of movement in his art, diverging from the traditional notion of artworks as static objects.
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