Conversation with the Collector: World War II and Calder
During World War II, Americans at home were left to negotiate and adjust their lifestyle to food rations and other sacrifices – including the conservation and recycling of metal for the war effort.
What did this mean for Alexander Calder, an artist whose groundbreaking works were based on sheet metal and metal wire?
During the war, it meant experimentation with other materials such as wood. (You can see this playful Hen from 1943 in Alexander Calder: A Balancing Act for only 7 more days!)
Once the war was over, it meant the opening of a floodgate of creativity and one of the most productive periods of the artist’s career.
– Nicole Chism Griffin, Associate Manager of PR at SAM