Trois Pics Intermediate Maquette 1967 by Alexander Calder
Trois Pics Intermediate Maquette
Alexander Calder’s 1967 Study for a Monumental Sculpture
This gouache study, Trois Pics Intermediate Maquette, captures Alexander Calder at the height of his late-career exploration of monumental public sculpture. Created in 1967, the work serves as a preparatory sketch for his eventual large-scale steel stabiles—specifically foreshadowing the 1971 Trois Pics installed in Paris. The composition’s three jagged peaks, rendered in bold black against a pale ground, reveal Calder’s signature balance between geometric precision and organic fluidity. Unlike his earlier mobiles, this maquette emphasizes static equilibrium, a shift that defined his final two decades.
The piece emerged during Calder’s intensive period of collaboration with French engineers to realize increasingly ambitious outdoor works. As the Museum of Modern Art documents, 1967 marked a turning point when Calder began translating his smaller paper studies into towering metal forms. Here, the gouache medium allowed him to experiment with negative space and structural tension before committing to steel. The stark contrast between the black forms and unmodulated background focuses attention on the interplay of angles—a hallmark of his mature style.
Calder’s Monumental Turn in the Late 1960s
By 1967, Alexander Calder had spent over three decades refining his vocabulary of abstract forms. The Trois Pics series represents his deliberate pivot toward architectural scale, a direction that would culminate in landmark commissions like the 1974 Flamingo in Chicago. This maquette phase allowed Calder to resolve complex engineering challenges on paper before engaging with industrial fabricators. The gouache medium’s immediacy preserved the spontaneity of his initial gestures while enabling precise adjustments to proportions.
The work’s title references its eventual realization in three 24-meter steel “peaks” for Paris’s La Défense district. As noted in the Tate’s artist profile, Calder’s late-period stabiles often began as small studies like this one, where he could test visual rhythms without physical constraints. The 1967 date places this maquette between his retrospective at the Guggenheim and his receipt of the Presidential Medal of Freedom—years when his international reputation as a pioneer of kinetic art was firmly established.
Calder’s genius lay in making monumental forms feel weightless. This maquette distills that paradox: three solid peaks that seem to float against the void.
Gouache as a Problem-Solving Tool
Compositional Balance
The asymmetrical arrangement of the three forms creates a dynamic tension despite their static nature. Calder positioned the tallest peak slightly off-center, counterbalanced by the shorter forms’ combined visual weight. This careful calibration on paper directly informed the eventual sculpture’s ability to dominate its urban surroundings without overwhelming them.
Material Simulation
The matte black gouache mimics the flat finish of painted steel, while the paper’s texture suggests the industrial surfaces Calder would later employ. By working at this intermediate scale (30×40 cm), he could evaluate how the forms would interact with light and space when enlarged twentyfold. The absence of shading reinforces the focus on pure silhouette—a technique he perfected in his stabiles.
Own This Calder Maquette Study
Bring home this essential 1967 gouache study, presented in our gallery framing with archival materials. Free worldwide shipping ensures it arrives ready to display.
Add to Cart — $24999 with Free ShippingDisplaying Calder’s Geometric Abstraction
This 30×40 cm print commands attention in modern interiors. The high-contrast palette pairs dramatically with white or deep gray walls, while the composition’s verticality suits narrow spaces like hallways or above consoles. For optimal impact, position the work at eye level in well-lit areas where the sharp edges cast subtle shadows. The framing’s neutral profile ensures the focus remains on Calder’s precise forms, making it equally effective in minimalist lofts or traditional galleries. Consider grouping with other Calder studies for a curated display of his evolutionary process.
What framing is included with this print?
Each print arrives in our gallery framing system featuring a solid wood frame with archival matting and UV-protective acrylic glazing. The neutral profile complements Calder’s bold composition without competing with it.
Where do you ship and how long does delivery take?
We offer free shipping to all countries with no minimum purchase. Production typically requires 3–5 business days, followed by 5–10 business days for international delivery via tracked courier.
How long will the colors remain vibrant?
Our prints use pigment-based inks rated for 100+ years without fading under normal lighting conditions. The UV-filtering acrylic glazing provides additional protection against sunlight exposure.
What is your return policy?
You may return your framed print within 30 days of delivery for a full refund. We provide return shipping labels and cover all associated costs.
Sources & Further Reading
- Museum of Modern Art. "Alexander Calder." moma.org
- Tate. "Alexander Calder 1898–1976." tate.org.uk
- Smithsonian American Art Museum. "Alexander Calder: Modern from the Start." americanart.si.edu
More Works by Alexander Calder
Explore Calder’s evolutionary journey through these additional framed prints from our collection.
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