Caravel Bird (L'Oiseau Caravelle)

Jean Arp French, born Germany
1965
Not on view
Made only a year before the artist’s death, Caravel Bird (L'Oiseau Caravelle) serves as a late example of Arp’s biomorphic inventions, derived from observations of nature’s organic purity and growth processes. The artist started making these three-dimensional, free-standing forms in 1930, modelling them first in plaster and then translating them into either stone or bronze. In this later stage of his practice, plaster allowed Arp the freedom to experiment with asymmetrical, curving forms that, in their final iterations, give the allusion of imminent metamorphosis. Referring to this biomorphic work as l’art concret (or concrete art), Arp expressed a desire to create art as "concrete and sensual as a leaf or stone."[1]


[1] A.D.S. Donaldson and Ann Stephen. J.W. Power: Abstraction-Création, Paris 1934, Sydney: University Art Gallery, the University of Sydney, 2012, p. 106.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Caravel Bird (L'Oiseau Caravelle)
  • Artist: Jean Arp (French (born Germany), Strasbourg 1886–1966 Basel)
  • Date: 1965
  • Medium: Bronze
  • Edition: 2/5
  • Dimensions: 26 1/2 × 14 × 11 3/4 in. (67.3 × 35.6 × 29.8 cm)
  • Classification: Sculpture
  • Credit Line: Gift of the Maria and Conrad Janis Estate, 2024
  • Object Number: 2024.88.1
  • Rights and Reproduction: © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
  • Curatorial Department: Modern and Contemporary Art

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