Posts Tagged ‘alexander calder’

Artist of the moment…..Curtis Jere

 

Curtis Jere is the combined name of two artists renowned for their sculptures and wall hangings. One artist’s name was Curtis Freiler and the other was named Jerry Fels.

The company designed works that were produced by Artisan House. The goods are now produced out of China.

The company Artisan House was made to mass produce art quality items for the home in the early 1960s. The company was started by Freiler and Fels as they were brother in laws. The company was sold by the brothers in 1972. Since the company has been sold many times.

The works by C. Jere have become increasingly hot in the vintage collector niche.

What great designs on their wall hangings. I even prefer some of C. Jere’s work to another well known artists who worked in the same genre, Alexander Calder.

Curtis Freiler and Jerry Fels have both passed away.

In this clip we take a brief look at some wall hangings by duo:

price range information: Sorry none available.

 

In this clip we take a closer look at  wonderful wall hanging by Curtis Jere:

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Art World News…..turning a $15 investment into six figures….

Calder

As a reader I hope you caught the posts showing people who purchased great works of art from Goodwill or garage sales. The well known artist Alexander Calder,  also designed around 1,000 pieces of jewelry over his lifetime.

A lady purchased a necklace years ago in 2005 at a flea market. Then years later she attended a jewelry show at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. A foundation certified that the piece the lady bought was actually included in a show at the New York Modern Museum of Art in 1943.

The piece of jewelry will be going for auction at the end of September and is expected to bring well into six figures!

Not bad for a $15 investment!

Always keep those eyes open for a great work of art!

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Artist of the moment….Great Goodwill Art Bargain…Alexander Calder…

Below a wonderful collection of sculptures by Alexander Calder.

Calder is given credit for inventing the moving sculpture. In this clip see some of his mobile artworks.

A few months ago you may remember a post about Ilya Bolotowsky. He was a Russian painter who was abstract in his art. A customer of a Goodwill store came upon a work by Bolotowsky, but didn’t know it. The customer just enjoyed the art! She eventually had the artwork appraised at it was an original work of art by Ilya Bolotowsky. It later sold at auction for $36,000. What a great story!

Another lucky customer of a Goodwill store has come across an art bargain. This time the artist was Alexander Calder, our featured artist of the moment. A teacher named Kathy Mallet was able to find a print by Calder at a Goodwill store and paid $12.34  for it. The work was a lithographic print by Alexander Calder and it sold for $9,000 this past week! Mallet is employed by Georgetown University in their public relations department.

Here is a picture of Kathy Mallet with the artwork she bought using her loyalty card. The original price was $12.99, with her loyalty card the price was taken down to $12.34.

mallett

Alexander Calder was born in Lawton, Pennsylvania in the year 1898.  His father Alexander Stirling Calder  was well known sculptor who was awarded many public commissions. His father was very skilled at working with both the male and female figure. Much of his work was very large in scale, public sized if you will. Below is an sample of his style of sculpture. Stirling Calder passed away in 1945.

stirlingcalder

Alexander Calder is also known for making many miniature sized figure works out of wire. His goal was to create an entire miniature circus.

In 1902 Calder posed for his father in a sculpture work that is now owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The work was titled THE MAN CLUB.

As a child his family lived in Arizona, California, and then back in Philadelphia. Then the artist’s father got a great position as head of sculpture with the Panama Pacific International Exposition. The family would move back and forth between New York and California.

For college the artist attended the Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey. His bachelor’s degree was in mechanical engineering. For a short time he was a mechanic on a ship that sailed to many exotic locales around the world. For his art skills, he took a job at the National Police Gazette where he was given an assignment to draw the Ringling Brothers circus. This would become a favorite lifelong theme for Calder.

He would move to New York and start taking classes at the Art Students League of New York.

Calder eventually settled in Paris raising two small children. He went on to make wearable art in addition to his paintings and sculptures.

Calder died in 1976 after a well received opening at a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York city.

Price range info: Sculptures can go as much as $4.4 million dollars. Works in gouache can be found in the six figures, less than $120,000. Ink works can be found for $20,000 to $50,000.

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