Chadwick's mobiles embody elements of architecture, design and
sculpture. One author has described the qualities he wished to
achieve in the mobiles he produced at this time as `lightness, freedom
from the ground, flexibility and variety of form and materials'. This
sculpture was previously owned by sculptor Geoffrey Clarke, who,
during the summer of 1950, was a fellow pupil on a welding course at
the British Oxygen Company's Welding School in Cricklewood.