High Wire: Calder’s Circus at 100

2025

Wire sculpture of a strong man balancing three acrobats stacked above him.

Bill Irwin: This large sculpture called The Brass Family is one of many sculptures of circus performers Calder made apart from his miniature circus. It's much larger than any of those elements, and its parts don't move. In fact, in many ways, it is a work about stability and immobility. The large nude man who anchors this family is rock solid, hugely muscular and constructed out of a heavy gauge wire. His graceful family is more daintily constructed and more vulnerably posed, but there's little sense of physical danger at the same time. It definitely reminds us that the circus is an entirely different world. The brass family doesn't have the family structure that most of us are used to.

Caroline Simonds: But in those days, in the twenties, you were born in a trunk. You were born into the circus.

Bill Irwin: Caroline Simonds is a clown and former acrobat. She runs the Paris-based organization Le Rire Médecin which brings clowns to the pediatric wards of hospitals.

Caroline Simonds: You just started off by standing on your father's shoulders when you were eighteen months old. As soon as you could walk, they made you stand on your father's shoulders and then on his head, and then they flipped you up in the air and they caught you by your feet. So families basically nurtured the art of acrobats, and then the acrobats became the clowns later on.


Alexander Calder, The Brass Family, 1929. Brass wire and painted wood, 67 × 41 1/8 × 8 7/8 in. (170.2 × 104.5 × 22.5 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of the artist 69.255. © 2026 Calder Foundation, New York / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

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