Saturday, October 4, 2025

Day 4789: Calder Gardens & 10-4 Wedding Update & Greece Wind Harps.


"I remember when": watercolor, junk paper collage & ink.





  


Want music?



     Click : Ryan Toby, Oh Happy Day

All artwork © Alexander Calder. All photos by Iwan Baan, courtesy of Calder Gardens

Calder Gardens, a Light-Filled Museum and Prairie, Houses the Sculptor’s Work in Philadelphia


Alexander Calder’s most widely recognized creation is perhaps the mobile. The lauded artist was a titan of Modernism whose desire to “draw” three-dimensional objects spirited the invention of what went on to become both an art historical achievement and a ubiquitous nursery item. Broadly interested in movement and space, Calder (1898–1976) is often cited as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.


Now, his work finds a new home in a sprawling museum in Philadelphia, the city where his family lived for generations and where he was born. Located on Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Calder Gardenscomprises a 1.8-acre landscape and an 18,000-square-foot building that presents a rotating selection of the artist’s works.


The museum is designed to bring art, architecture, and nature into a constant and ever-evolving conversation. Outdoor sculptures stand amid a lush prairie by Piet Oudolf, while architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron created an interior that interacts with Calder’s sculptures. Large-scale pieces loom inside airy concrete galleries, while smaller mobiles seem to nest perfectly in a well-lit opening.


Calder Gardens is open Wednesday through Monday. Find more on its website.











Thursday: Countdown to 10-4 Wedding


Centerpieces for the Weddin Rehearsal Dinner, ready for transport.





 



  
 
A 5+ minute video, It's a Cinch, here
 


  
 
Just because ...

Blue-earred pheasant


 

Saturday's Smiles ... 



 

 










    



  
  

         



No comments: