Few artists have altered the course of modern sculpture as profoundly as Alexander Calder (1898–1976). From the late 1920s onward, he worked both in the United States and France, creating a new sculptural language grounded in movement and chance. It was in Paris that he introduced his first “mobiles,” setting in motion a practice that would unfold over more than five decades and ensure him global acclaim.

Calder’s current exhibition at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris (through August 16), which celebrates the 100th anniversary of his arrival in the City of Light, underscores the scope of his contributions. Bringing together sculptures, drawings, archival material, and jewelry, it offers a comprehensive overview of a practice that seamlessly combined engineering and abstraction. From delicate suspended mobiles to monumental structures known as “stabiles,” the presentation reveals an artist who merged technical precision with a playful, almost improvisational approach, constantly challenging the boundaries of balance and space.

Throughout his career, motion remained Calder’s central concern—not only as a physical phenomenon, but as a way of rethinking the relationship between his artwork and the viewer. His works, at once rigorously constructed and seemingly weightless, create a field of shifting perceptions, where form is never fixed but always in flux. Below, ARTnews revisits Calder’s life, work, and artistic vision through some of his most emblematic pieces.

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