Henry Moore (1898–1986) is perhaps best known for his semi-abstract sculptures, inspired by nature and human figures, but the British artist also produced tapestries, drawings and carvings. His works became synonymous with post-war modernism but he also became internationally famous as the emerging medium of television brought his art to a wider audience.
Born in Castleford in 1898, Moore knew he wanted to be a sculptor from an early age. However, he trained as a teacher before fighting in the First World War. An ex-serviceman’s grant allowed him to pursue his ambition, enrolling at Leeds School of Art (where he met Barbara Hepworth) and then the Royal College of Art in London. Although the curriculum encouraged students to copy classical Western art, during his spare time Moore enjoyed exploring the British Museum’s ethnographic collection. In 1928, he had his first solo exhibition and in 1929 married painter Irina Radetsky; they moved to Hampstead Heath, where their neighbours included Hepworth and sculptor Naum Gabo. After graduating, Moore won a scholarship to visit Italy. Between the wars, Moore taught at the RCA and then the Chelsea School of Art, where he met historian Kenneth Clark, who championed Moore’s work among the British establishment.
Henry Moore is perhaps best known for his abstract sculptures of the human figure—often reclining figures (for example, Draped Seated Woman (1956–1957) or mother-and-child compositions. However, he also produced drawings using crayon, chalk, watercolour and gouache. The body parts of his works were occasionally disconnected and separated to accentuate the geological as curvilinear abstraction—this can be seen in Composition (1931) and Two Large Forms (1969).
In 1933, Moore first created holes as a sculptural form in their own right—his friendship with the surrealist artist Roland Penrose prompted him to investigate bronze casting and fluid forms wrapped around holes (thoughts on this can be seen in 1939’s Ideas for Sculpture in Metal).
Moore adapted some of his ink-and-watercolour drawings into tapestries, which were woven by makers from Dovecot Studios in Scotland, Brose Patrick Studio and West Dean College in Sussex.
Moore’s former home in Perry Green in Hertfordshire is now owned by the Henry Moore Foundation and the 28ha site houses the world’s largest collection of his works. Visitors to London can see his sculptures in Greenwich Park, College Green (Westminster), Canary Wharf, Kensington Gardens, Battersea Park and St Paul’s Cathedral, among other places.
After graduation from the RCA, Henry Moore won a six-month travelling scholarship; he visited Italy and Paris where, in the Trocadéro, he saw a cast of a Mexican Chacmool reclining figure. The position and weight of the figure fascinated Moore, and he would return to the theme of reclining figures throughout his career. Moore’s sinuous abstract sculptures were influenced by the works of artists including Picasso, Constantin Brancusi, as well as the landscapes of his native Yorkshire.
When Henry Moore’s home was bombed in 1940, he and Irina relocated to Hertfordshire—however, his ties with London were still strong. Without material to sculpt, he started drawing, including pencil-and-wax-crayon images of Londoners sheltering in Tube stations during the Blitz. These images saw him commissioned as an official war artist.
Yes, thieves have stolen Henry Moore’s sculptures. In December 2005, a cast of Reclining Figure 1969–1970 was removed from the Henry Moore Foundation using a crane. It was never recovered. In 2012, Sundial 1965 was stolen from the same place but the piece was recovered following an appeal.
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