Hiquily has always claimed his admiration for the work of Calder, whose work fascinates him and
influences him considerably, particularly through his mobiles. The movement of elements under the action
of natural phenomena such as wind or water is at the heart of his artistic concerns. But the sculptor
very quickly finds his own style, his own “language” as he liked so much to say.
Since his beginnings and throughout his career, the artist has designed moving works that come alive or
sway by gesture, the action of water or a steel ball, and even of a random movement generated by a
computer.
It was in 1963 that he created his first monumental project in Marbella, Spain, with a theme that will
be very dear to him throughout his work, the weather vane.
A few weeks before his death at the beginning of 2013, Hiquily designed his last works: a set of four
weather vanes and 1 stabile as part of a project of monumental works.
Each of these weathervanes is named after one of the four seasons, and the stabile is titled
L'Australienne. Hiquily will unfortunately never see them completed and we present them for the first
time today.