Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza
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Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza INTRODUCTION Alexander “Sandy” Calder (1898-1976) was born in Lawnton, Pennsylvania (near Philadelphia) and grew up in a household steeped in art. His mother, Nanette Lederer Calder, was a portrait painter who studied art in Paris and Philadelphia. His father, Alexander Stirling Calder, was a noted sculptor who created many public monuments in Philadelphia. Sandy Calder’s grandfather, Alexander Milne Calder, also a sculptor, designed the statue of William Penn atop Philadelphia’s City Hall. Sandy Calder created his first sculpture, a clay elephant, in 1902, at age 4. He soon developed an interest in tools and in constructing toys and other objects, and went on to earn a college degree in mechanical engineering in 1919. After trying an assortment of jobs, Calder decided to become an artist and began studying painting at the Art Students League in New York in 1923. In 1926, after working as an illustrator in New York, he traveled to Paris (then the capital of the art world), where he would live for much of the rest of his life. He began building mixed media kinetic toys, which he exhibited in art galleries in Paris and New York. Calder used some of the same materials and techniques for his early sculptures as for the toys, crafting them in wire and wood. In 1933, Calder and his wife returned to the United States and purchased a farmhouse in Roxbury, Connecticut. He set up an art studio in the icehouse on the property. In the late 1930s, Calder started using sheets of metal, connected by large bolts, to create organic forms. His career as a public artist began during World War II, when he received several important commissions. Flamingo by Alexander Calder, Federal Center Plaza, Chicago Calder’s sculptures drew the most attention from critics and the general public, but he also produced paintings, drawings, prints, and jewelry throughout his career. He has been the subject of hundreds of exhibitions in museums and galleries, and his works are included in the permanent collections of museums around the world. © 2012 by the Chicago Metro History Education Center
Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza CREATING FLAMINGO BY ALEXANDER CALDER In Paris in 1930, Calder began experimenting in abstract art and concentrating on mobiles, the type of sculpture for which he would become best known. The French artist Marcel Duchamp first used the term mobile to describe Calder’s works. In French the word indicates both “moveable” and “motive,” a double meaning Calder liked. In his last years, Calder devoted himself to large outdoor sculptures. Many take the form of stabiles, a term coined by another French artist-friend of Calder, Jean Arp. Stabiles are self-supporting and immovable. They often take forms that suggest abstracted plants, animals, and insects. Calder typically worked out the design for these large sculptures by creating small maquettes or models. First, Calder fabricated the maquettes in his Connecticut studio. He then turned over the production of the monumental artwork to a factory, most often Etablissements, Biémont in Tours, France. The research department of the factory would scale the piece to its full-size, then boilermakers would fabricate the actual work in metal, under Calder’s supervision. Stabiles such as Flamingo were made of carbon steel. © 2012 by the Chicago Metro History Education Center 2
Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza CHICAGO FEDERAL CENTER PLAZA Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed the three buildings comprising Chicago Federal Center Plaza between 1959 and 1964, but budgetary problems prevented their completion until 1974. Born in 1886 in Aachen, Germany, Mies moved to Berlin at age 19 and learned architecture as an apprentice. In 1930 he joined the Bauhaus, the leading German design school, as director of architecture. Mies moved to Chicago in 1937 to lead the architecture school at the Armour Institute of Technology (now the Illinois Institute of Technology). In Chicago he pioneered the rigidly geometric and simplified design of steel and glass skyscrapers, a Federal Plaza as viewed from the corner of Adams and Dearborn building type that has become streets synonymous with modern architecture around the world. Chicago Federal Center Plaza exemplifies the impulse of the US government in the 1950s to modernize its administrative and judicial buildings. The three buildings frame a large public plaza at the corner of Dearborn and Adams streets in the heart of the Loop. The open plaza framed by the three government buildings was an important part of the overall design of the ensemble. Like the other open spaces along Dearborn Street in the Loop—such as Daley Center Plaza and the First National Bank of Chicago (now Chase) Plaza—planners intended Federal Plaza to provide breathing room and space for public gatherings amid the Loop’s dense assembly of skyscrapers. Today Federal Plaza serves as the site of a regular Farmer’s Market and many ad hoc gatherings. © 2012 by the Chicago Metro History Education Center 3
Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza FLAMINGO BY ALEXANDER CALDER When Calder’s Flamingo was installed in 1974, it added color and a sense of dynamism to the plaza. The sculpture’s bold vermilion hue and cervical form offer a bold contrast to the somber, black rectangular forms of the buildings. Springing 53 feet into the air and weighing 50 tons, Flamingo has been described as a colossal spider, a huge bird, and a drooping flower. At the same time, the sculpture’s industrial materials (sheet metal and giant bolts) echo those of the skyscrapers, enhancing the visual and material unity of the entire ensemble. The sculpture rests on small feet, leaving virtually the whole plaza open to pedestrians. Calder publicly presented the model for Flamingo at the Art Institute of Chicago on April 23, 1973. This small version is currently on view at the museum’s Modern Wing. The full-sized sculpture was unveiled in Federal Plaza on October 24, 1974. The same day, a mobile by Calder titled Universe was put on view at the Sears Tower (now Willis Tower) and the exhibition “Alexander Calder: A Retrospective” opened at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. The city declared the day “Alexander Calder Day” and celebrated the occasion with a circus parade, in honor of one of Calder’s favorite subjects. (His famous sculpture Circus now resides in the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.) President Gerald R. Ford proclaimed Flamingo “a conspicuous milestone in the federal government’s effort to create a better environment.” Calder’s Flamingo was commissioned specifically for Federal Plaza by the United States General Services Agency (GSA), the government bureau that handles commissions of publicly-funded art and architecture, among other things. It was the first artwork commissioned by the GSA through its Art in Architecture Program. This program, popularly known as “Percent for Art,” mandates a percentage of the budget for any government building project be set aside for a major work of public art. (When the program was established in 1962, the amount was one percent. It was reduced to half a percent in 1972 and has fluctuated at low levels since then.) © 2012 by the Chicago Metro History Education Center 4
Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza ACTIVITIES AND QUESTIONS During the building boom that followed the Second World War, modern public art became a popular addition to urban plazas, parks, sculpture gardens, airports, and lobbies. The bold abstract forms and materials of modernist sculptures complemented the sleek, steel-and- glass skyscrapers that came to dominate many urban landscapes. Unlike earlier public sculptures, which most often commemorated famous individuals or events (such as the statue of Lincoln in Lincoln Park and the relief sculptures on the DuSable Bridge), abstract sculpture featured no readily apparent symbols or historical narrative. The trend for installing non-commemorative sculptures around Chicago began in 1967 with the installation of a massive untitled work by Picasso fabricated in Cor-Ten steel in front of the Richard J. Daley Center. Although the sculpture puzzled many viewers and its enigmatic appearance stirred controversy, the Picasso has become a beloved icon of Chicagoans and visitors alike. In 1978, the Chicago City Council unanimously approved an ordinance stipulating that a percentage of the cost of constructing or renovating municipal structures be set aside for the commission or purchase of artwork. Inspired by the federal “Percent for Art” program, this city ordinance was one of the first of its kind in the United States. Today, there are more than 200 similar programs across the nation. Activities and Questions for Students 1. What do you think the sculpture represents? 2. If you happened to walk through Federal Plaza and encountered Flamingo, how would you react to it? Would you find it friendly? Intimidating? Scary? Explain. 3. How does Calder’s sculpture relate to the surrounding buildings? How does it relate to the public space of Federal Plaza? 4. What would the plaza look and feel like without it? © 2012 by the Chicago Metro History Education Center 5
Alexander Calder in Federal Plaza ADDITIONAL RESOURCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY Alan G. Artner, “A Century After His Birth, Alexander Calder’s Sculptures Stand Among the City’s Most Highly Regarded,” Chicago Tribune, July 22, 1998. “Blind to Explore Calder Work Through Replica,” Chicago Tribune, December 14, 1974. Elizabeth Brenner, “How Art Structures Chicago Image,” Chicago Tribune, July 15, 1979. “The Flamingo Fandango,” Chicago Tribune, September 20, 1984. Michael Kammen, Visual Shock: A History of Art Controversies in American Culture (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006), 63-66, 166-169, 213–253. Michael Knight, “Constructing a Calder is a Labor of Love,” New York Times, February 9, 1974. Joan Marter, “Alexander Calder’s Stabiles: Monumental Public Sculptures in America,” American Art Journal 11, no. 3, (1979): 75–85. Marla Prather, Alexander Calder 1898–1976 (Washington DC; National Gallery of Art and New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998). © 2012 by the Chicago Metro History Education Center 6
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