Object: Alexander Calder Mobiles

1 MIN READ

On Tuesday May 8, at 7 p.m., bidders will have a rare chance at acquiring one of Alexander Calder’s mobiles. Christies will auction off one red and one white mobile that architect Eliot Noyes commissioned from Calder for his home in New Canaan, Conn., where he had set up his practice in the 1940s. The house had a central courtyard that allowed the mobiles to be seen from all sides of the glass-walled building. Noyes was a member of the Harvard Five, along with Philip Johnson and Marcel Breuer. He was also the first director of the new Industrial Design department at the Museum of Modern Art, where he met Calder in 1941 when the sculpture artist was installing one of his first exhibitions. The two became friends, leading to the collaboration that produced the painted-sheet-metal-and-wire mobiles—one executed in 1950, and one in 1957—that then hung in Noyes’s home for over 50 years. Christies estimates their value at $3.5 million to $4.5 million each. • christies.com

About the Author

Lindsey M. Roberts

Lindsey M. Roberts is a freelance writer outside of Seattle, specializing in interiors and design, and a former assistant managing editor at ARCHITECT. Her work has appeared in National Geographic, Gray, Preservation, and The Washington Post, for which she writes a monthly column about products for the home.

No recommended contents to display.

Upcoming Events

  • Build-to-Rent Conference

    JW Marriott Phoenix Desert Ridge

    Register Now
  • Reimagining Sense of Place: Materiality, Spatial Form, and Connections to Nature

    Webinar

    Register for Free
  • Homes that Last: How Architects Are Designing a Resilient Future

    Webinar

    Register Now
All Events