Film Categories
Art Periods
- 1.Early Cultures
- 2.First Civilizations
- 3.Africa
- 4.Pre-Columbian America
- 5.Romanesque and Gothic
- 6.Renaissance and Mannerism
- 7.Northern Renaissance
- 8.Rembrandt
- 9.Baroque and Rococo
- 10. Neo-classicists and Romantics
- 11. The Victorians
- 12. Impressionists and Post-Impressionists
- 13. Art Nouveau
- 14. Expressionism
- 15. Cubism and Futurism
- 16. Into Abstraction
- 17. The Bauhaus and De Stijl
- 18. Dada and Surrealism
- 19. Modern Masters
- 20. Modern and Contemporary Sculptors
- 21. Contemporary Painters
- 22. New Directions New Dimensions
- 23. Modern Architecture and Design
Films to Buy
- Dina in the King's Garden
- Picasso, the Sculptor*
- Henry Moore: London 1940-42
- Nature and Nature: Andy Goldsworthy*
- Sculpture 58, the Story of a Creation
- Calder's Circus*
- Anthony Caro
- Chadwick
- The Spinney by Jean Dubuffet
- The Genesis of a Sculpture
- Sculpture Australia
- If Brains Were Dynamite
- Submarine
- Sculpture in the City - Spoleto
Calder's Circus
19 minutes, color, age range: 5 - adult, #621

Alexander Calder Calder's Circus, 1926-31, detail of installation
Photo: Geoffrey Clemets and Jerry L Thompson "Collection of Whitney Museum of American Art, New York"Alexander Calder's fascination with the circus began in his mid-twenties, when he published illustrations in a New York journal of Barnum and Bailey's Circus, for which he held a year's pass. It was in Paris in 1927 that he created the miniature circus celebrated in this film - tiny wire performers, ingeniously articulated to walk tightropes, dance, lift weights and engage in acrobatics in the ring. The Parisian avant-garde would gather in Calder's studio to see the circus in operation. It was, as critic James Johnson Sweeney noted, 'a laboratory in which some of the most original features of his later work were to be developed.' This film exudes the great personal charm of Calder himself, moving and working the tiny players like a ringmaster, while his wife winds up the gramophone in the background. The Circus is now housed at the Whitney Museum in New York.
Biographical details about Alexander Calder
Credits
Director: Carlos Vilardebo
Presenter: Alexander Calder:
Channel on blinkx: embed free previews into courses,
promotions, blogs, web sites, and distance learning.
© 2008 The Roland Collection. Site optimised for Internet Explorer 7 and 1024 x 768 screen. Previews play on Mac and PC, full films only on PC.