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Calder Untitled (1953) All-Over Print Top Handle Tote Bag

Calder Untitled (1953) All-Over Print Top Handle Tote Bag

This heavyweight cotton canvas tote bag features Calder's gouache made into an all-over print, with contrasting green nylon handles and tag featuring Calder's signature, and an interior zippered pocket.

  • Heavyweight Cotton Canvas
  • Lined in black cotton poplin with an interior zippered pocket
  • Webbed double handles
  • Main compartment measures 17x18 inches (46x62 cm)
  • Spot clean
  • Made in China

Although celebrated for his work in three dimensions, Calder was also a prodigious painter. In 1953 he spent a year in Aix-en-Provence, where he set up a makeshift space for paintings on paper. As Calder recalled, ā€œI would moisten the paper with a flow of water and wait till it dried a bit but not too much; then I would draw on it with a brush full of China ink—this would develop clouds and trees and fungi and things of that nature.ā€ Calder also made high-contrast, monochromatic illustrations in ink with crosshatched stripes.

Ā Alexander Calder, Untitled, 1953
Ā© 2024 Calder Foundation, New York, All Rights Reserved.
CalderĀ® is a registered trademark of Calder Foundation, New York.

$88.00
Calder Untitled (1953) All-Over Print Top Handle Tote Bag—
$88.00
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Description

This heavyweight cotton canvas tote bag features Calder's gouache made into an all-over print, with contrasting green nylon handles and tag featuring Calder's signature, and an interior zippered pocket.

  • Heavyweight Cotton Canvas
  • Lined in black cotton poplin with an interior zippered pocket
  • Webbed double handles
  • Main compartment measures 17x18 inches (46x62 cm)
  • Spot clean
  • Made in China

Although celebrated for his work in three dimensions, Calder was also a prodigious painter. In 1953 he spent a year in Aix-en-Provence, where he set up a makeshift space for paintings on paper. As Calder recalled, ā€œI would moisten the paper with a flow of water and wait till it dried a bit but not too much; then I would draw on it with a brush full of China ink—this would develop clouds and trees and fungi and things of that nature.ā€ Calder also made high-contrast, monochromatic illustrations in ink with crosshatched stripes.

Ā Alexander Calder, Untitled, 1953
Ā© 2024 Calder Foundation, New York, All Rights Reserved.
CalderĀ® is a registered trademark of Calder Foundation, New York.