Rotating marshmallows, eggs and orbiting popcorn are part of the moving visual feast in today’s paean to early 20th-century American sculptor Alexander Calder by photographer and filmmaker Carl Kleiner and his wife Evelina, a set designer. Taking the dynamic artist’s most notable forms as a starting point, the Stockholm duo borrowed Calder’s abstracted aesthetic and use of wire in the creation of these mobile food sculptures. Calder’s resolute interest in geometric shapes, sense of movement and the strangely celestial bodies that occupy his work led him to inhabit circles that included Marcel Duchamp and Jean-Paul Sartre, and he continues to inform and inspire artists, designers and architects to this day. The Whitney Museum’s upcoming exhibition American Legends: From Calder to O’Keeffe, opening this weekend, situates his enduring allure alongside other seminal early 20th-century American legends such as Edward Hopper, Jacob Lawrence and Elie Nadelman.