Skip to main content
Kunsthal Rotterdam by night. Photo: Ossip van Duivenbode
Kunsthal Rotterdam by night. Photo: Ossip van Duivenbode

Kunsthal Rotterdam

Calder Now

This coming autumn, Kunsthal Rotterdam will proudly present Calder Now, an extensive exhibition that explores for the first time in Europe the modern master’s enduring and unmistakable influence on contemporary art. Calder Now presents over twenty sculptures by Alexander Calder alongside works by ten prominent contemporary artists: Olafur Eliasson, Žilvinas Kempinas, Simone Leigh, Ernesto Neto, Carsten Nicolai, Aki Sasamoto, Roman Signer, Monika Sosnowska, Sarah Sze, and Rirkrit Tiravanija.

Enigmatic, gravity-defying installations, sculptures that induce extraordinary optical experiences, and art that appeals to all the senses reveal new connections with Calder and bring into focus the countless extensions of his legacy. Offering a new perspective on the developments in contemporary art during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, this must-see Kunsthal production is being realised in close collaboration with guest curators Dieter Buchhart and Anna Karina Hofbauer, and the Calder Foundation. Many of the sculptures and installations will be shown in the Netherlands for the first time.

Image
Alexander Calder Blue Feather, ca. 1948. Photo: Stephen White, © 2021 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/Pictoright, Amsterdam
Alexander Calder Blue Feather, ca. 1948. Photo: Stephen White, © 2021 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/Pictoright, Amsterdam

Alexander Calder (United States, 1898-1976) instigated many revolutionary artistic innovations. In his quest to move beyond the three spatial dimensions—making the fourth dimension of time a prominent and indispensable element of his work—Calder succeeded in transforming the contemporary understanding of sculpture. He was the first to remove sculpture from its pedestal, suspending it in mid-air. With his dynamic mobiles that were able to move freely in space, he was one of the initiators—alongside artists such as Marcel Duchamp and László Moholy-Nagy—of the kinetic art movement that revolutionized the static nature of art at the beginning of the twentieth century. Calder became a source of inspiration for subsequent generations of artists.

Multisensory experience

In the Kunsthal’s largest gallery, a career-spanning selection of Calder’s groundbreaking works form the central focus of the exhibition, from early motorized works to hanging mobiles, standing mobiles such as Blue Feather (ca. 1948) and monumental sculptures. Artists from our own era resonate important themes in Calder’s oeuvre: light and reflection, humble materials, the senses, sound, activation, architecture, ephemera, gravity, performance, and positive and negative space. The ten international artists in Calder Now show pieces that could not have existed without the precedence of various innovative aspects from Calder’s visionary body of work. The exhibition leads the visitor through a multisensory experience.

Image
Alexander Calder, Untitled (maquette for 1939 New York World’s Fair), 1938. © 2021 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/Pictoright, Amsterdam
Alexander Calder, Untitled (maquette for 1939 New York World’s Fair), 1938. © 2021 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/Pictoright, Amsterdam

Olafur Eliasson, for instance, uses natural phenomena such as light to explore perception. Simone Leigh tells stories about the American history of slavery through the media of humble materials. And Monika Sosnowska transforms architectural materials into unexpected, gravity-defying sculptures, creating new visual connections between her art and the exhibition space. 2007 Calder Prize laureate Žilvinas Kempinas, whose sculptures are at the intersection of installation and kinetic art, will debut a new piece for Calder Now. Similarly, Aki Sasamoto will create a new performance work especially for the exhibition during her residency at Atelier Calder, which operates out of Calder’s home and studio in Saché, France. The exhibition shows how Calder’s legacy continues to inspire and inform contemporary practice fifty years after the artist’s death. These groundbreaking artists invite new conversations and interpretations of his oeuvre.

Business director of Kunsthal Rotterdam Herman van Karnebeek explains: “We are proud and pleased that this autumn’s unique ‘Calder Now’ exhibition will enable us to add a new chapter to the narrative of modern and contemporary art. This Kunsthal production is a wonderful addition to our tradition of presenting work by great modern masters, such as Alberto Giacometti, Edvard Munch, and Edward Hopper. It is thrilling to us that we will be the first to show this special, international exhibition here in Rotterdam and make these outstanding artworks accessible for a wide audience.”

21 November 2021 - 29 May 2022

Kunsthal Rotterdam
Museumpark
Westzeedijk 341
Rotterdam
kunsthal.nl