
"Perhaps the most influential of all twentieth-century sculptors, Alexander Calder worked primarily in Connecticut for several decades after settling in a Roxbury farmhouse in 1933. Connecticut provided a richly stimulating creative environment for him in the critical years when he developed his unique mobiles and stabiles and established his artistic reputation. This portrait of Calder, at work and at play, offers new insight into how his art was shaped by the state's landscape, his home and studio, his family, and the circle of artists, writers, curators, and collectors who befriended him."--BOOK JACKET.
Page Count:
168
Publication Date:
2000-01-01
ISBN-10:
0847822494
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