Whitney Descriptions Online: High Wire: Calder’s Circus at 100 Sat, Mar 7, 2026, 11:30 am–1 pm

Whitney Descriptions Online: High Wire: Calder’s Circus at 100

Sat, Mar 7, 2026
11:30 am–1 pm

A handmade circus scene with a wire lion tamer and a lion puppet in front of a colorful cage.
A handmade circus scene with a wire lion tamer and a lion puppet in front of a colorful cage.

Alexander Calder, Lion Tamer, Lion and Cage, from Calder's Circus, 1926-31. Wire, yarn, cloth, buttons, painted metal, wood, metal, leather and string, dimensions variable. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from a public fundraising campaign in May 1982. The Robert Wood Johnson Jr. Charitable Trust contributed one half of the funds. Additional major donations were given by The Lauder Foundation; the Robert Lehman Foundation, Inc.; the Howard and Jean Lipman Foundation, Inc.; an anonymous donor; The T.M. Evans Foundation, Inc.; MacAndrews & Forbes Group, Incorporated; the De Witt Wallace Fund, Incorporated; Martin and Agneta Gruss; Anne Phillips; Mr. and Mrs. Laurance S. Rockefeller; the Simon Foundation, Inc.; Marylou Whitney; Bankers Trust Company; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth N. Dayton; Joel and Anne Ehrenkranz; Irvin and Kenneth Feld; Flora Whitney Miller. More than 500 individuals from 26 states and abroad also contributed to the campaign 83.36.34.1a-f. © 2025 Calder Foundation, New York / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Tickets

Free with registration. Please contact accessfeedback@whitney.org or call (646) 666-5574 to learn more or register. A Zoom link will be provided upon confirmation of reservation.

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Online, via Zoom

Open to blind and low vision visitors

Join us for a virtual program focused on High Wire: Calder’s Circus at 100, led by educator Stina Puotinen. The tour begins at 11:30 am on Zoom.  

Whitney Descriptions Online provides an opportunity for visitors who are blind or have low vision to experience the richness and diversity of twentieth- and twenty-first-century American art through vivid description. Ninety-minute sessions are free of charge and are offered monthly on weekend mornings through Zoom and over the phone. 

For all accommodations, please email accessfeedback@whitney.org or call (646) 666-5574 with two weeks’ notice.


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
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Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.