JOHN CHAMBERLAIN: COMPRESSED FORMS
SKARSTEDT Paris is pleased to present John Chamberlain: Compressed Forms, an exhibition organized in collaboration with the John Chamberlain Estate.
March 26 - May 9, 2026
The presentation highlights the artist’s remarkable ability to translate monumental energy into intimate sculptural forms.
John Chamberlain (1927-2011) is widely recognized for his transformative approach to sculpture, particularly his dynamic constructions formed from automotive steel. Compressed Forms brings together a focused selection of small-scale works, revealing how Chamberlain channeled the intensity and improvisational energy of his larger sculptures into tightly resolved compositions.
Chamberlain began exploring the possibilities of a smaller scale in earnest during the 1980s, when he assembled what he described as a “Tonka Toy junkyard” of compressed metal fragments. The works that emerged share the fundamental vocabulary of his larger sculptures while operating through heightened concentration and density. On view will be a group from Chamberlain's Baby Tycoon series, including THEKINGSCATHEDRAL (1996), WHISTLER’S WHISTLE (2010) and COPACABANA COQUETTE (1992). These sculptures distill the artist’s signature vocabulary of folded metal and chromatic intensity to refined, highly concentrated forms.
COMPLICATEDCOMPANION (1986) exemplifies this compression: executed almost entirely in bare chromium-plated steel, its tightly scrolled form spirals inward like a mechanical rose, at once industrial and lyrical. Where Chamberlain’s larger works assert themselves through mass and presence, this piece engages the viewer through surface and tension, as light moves across its undulating planes with an almost meditative delicacy.
Across the exhibition, Chamberlain’s sculptures animate the gallery through a dynamic interplay of mass, surface, and color. In TWILIGHTTWINKLE (1998), flashes of hot pink, teal, orange, and deep rust collide across crushed metal planes, capturing Chamberlain’s signature alert and improvisational invention.