Tuesday, September 16, 2025

DOTS AND SWIRLS, ALEXANDER CALDER TAPESTRIES, Western Washington University Art Gallery

Detail, Alexander Calder Tapestry, Western Washington University Art Gallery.

When you think of artist Alexander Calder, you picture his colorful mobiles and giant stabiles. But he also worked in other media. In 1974-1975 he designed a series of 13 colorful tapestries made of dyed and braided maguey-fibers. They were manufactured in Nicaragua. A set of the tapestries, conserved in 2012 to their original brilliance by a group of students and volunteers at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Washington, under the direction of Geoffrey I. Brown, is currently on display in the gallery of the Performing Arts Center on campus.


On a visit to Bellingham last summer I had the opportunity to see the tapestries. In each, bold colors and shapes create striking patterns and designs. The tightly woven fibers create a subtle surface texture. Here are a few of my favorites:






The Calder tapestries are a gift of Niels H. Lauersen to the Collection of Western Gallery, Western Washington University. For more about other art on exhibit at Western Washington University, click HERE.

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