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Calder Gardens

3.1 (14 reviews)
Closed • 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
Updated 1 month ago

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Nadine S.

This was very disappointing - the actual Calder displays were lovely, but it was absolutely not worth the high price tag. It should be included with the Barnes admission - not an additional charge.

The most delicate mobile?
Brien M.

This lovely new museum is just the right size. So many quickly overwhelm my little brain. My only negative would be that although the museum shop had many tempting items, the prices were sky high. We think the surrounding gardens will be spectacular as the seasons progress.

Info brochure
Priya B.

Amazing art, poorly executed (and ultimately very small) gallery. Pennsylvania native and sculpture legend Alexander Calder is the focus of this new museum, which opened at the tail end of September earlier this year. Calder is most well known as the inventor of the hanging mobile, which was popularized in the 1930s through his sculptures and played an important role in laying the foundation of abstract and modern art. His career spanned over 50 years; his pieces are timeless and incredibly introspective, and his art lives on in famous institutions around the world, so needless to say, as a contemporary art enthusiast I was quite excited for a museum entirely dedicated to his work. Tickets are $18 per adult for non-members, easy to purchase online even day of, and is for timed entry to the museum and gardens. My friend and I went the first weekend in October on a Friday after lunch, so it wasn't super busy. Cheap street parking was easy to find in the surrounding blocks around Logan Square. The Gardens portion doesn't really require a ticket to see, as it surrounds the building. And, given that we came at the start of fall, there really wasn't much greenery or flowering to see. When we entered, they scanned our QR tickets and gave us a program that gave a brief blurb about the museum, but otherwise it was up to us to explore and discover. You start on the ground level and slowly go down a staircase and new pieces of the gallery unfold. It's certainly a cool entry, featuring both pieces that will rotate out periodically and a few permanent items. Calder's style is right up my alley and I found some of his hanging mobiles incredibly meditative and beautiful; he primarily uses blacks, whites, and primary colors and I loved how the museum played on natural and artificial lighting to really showcase each piece. Down the stairs there are about 3 rooms of art and then a small outdoor space with two pieces (one of which you couldn't even see properly as it relies on a hanging plant that hadn't produced leaves during the time of year I visited.) The whole museum takes max 30 minutes, even if you are really spending time observing the art and basking in it. There are a few pieces by Calder relatives which I thought was really interesting, but virtually no curation or guide to really help the viewer dig into the pieces they were seeing. Even the paper guide given at the start was extremely sparse on any information. We had to go back upstairs and ask the front desk to be sure we hadn't missed anything. We spent maybe 15 minutes perusing some of the interesting items in the gift shop, including an entire book dedicated to the thought process in designing the logo for the museum. It's ultimately a real dichotomy: incredibly stunning art, overly short experience, almost no thought given to patrons who want to dig into the art. It's a tough experience for fans of Calder. Ultimately I did really like the museum, mostly because I love Calder's work so much; but it's certainly not an experience where it feels like you are getting the bang for your buck.

Cityscape on an autumn day
Maxx P.

A Gem along the Parkway and fabulous addition to the cultural avenue from the Art Museum, Rodin, Barnes Collection and Franklin Institute. The new Calder Museum emerges from the Garden to the reflective wall and expands with wood details and textured concrete. The entrance is somewhat secretive with no signage. However, once inside, the Calder experience expands. The sculptures and mobiles are on display with room to explore. Shadows created from the natural light as well as fixtures give harmony and flow of movement. The architectural details and expansive spaces compliment the art. While traffic whizzes by outside along I-676, the Calder museum is a bubble of quiet creative atmosphere. Splendid indeed.

The gardens
Suzanne A.

The newest Philadelphia museum! The museum is located on the Parkway the home of several other Calder sculptures. The gardens are filled with native plants that change with the seasons. The building is set at the top of a small hill that blends with the landscape. The inside is different than other museums. It goes down underground rather than up. It is serene and contemplative.

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