Henry Moore British, 1898-1986

Works
  • Eight Sculptural Ideas (Girl Writing)
    Henry Moore
    Eight Sculptural Ideas (Girl Writing), 1973
    Lithograph in colors on Arches paper
    26.5 x 30.5"
    Sold
  • Group of Figures
    Henry Moore
    Group of Figures, 1974
    Lithograph in colors on Rives BFK paper
    9 x 13"
  • Turning Figure No. 2
    Henry Moore
    Turning Figure No. 2, 1971
    Etching in black and grey on Rives paper.
    9.25 x 5.43"
  • Reclining Figure No. 1
    Henry Moore
    Reclining Figure No. 1, 1970-72
    Etching and aquatint on Rives paper.
    4.7 x 9.8"
    Sold
Overview

Henry Moore is perhaps the most influential public sculptor of the twentieth century. Drawing on his studies of Classical, pre-Columbian and African art, Moore created original and truly modern sculptural forms with Abstractions of organic shapes as his primary motif. In addition, Moore is particularly well known for his reclining nudes and the “Mother and Child” series. 


Throughout his career, Moore utilized a wide range of techniques and media, such as line drawing and cross-hatching, gouache, chalk and crayon, to bring two-dimensional forms to life, creating impressions of movement and radiance and carving human forms from a sheet of paper in a similar fashion to the way in which he carved expressive forms from slabs of stone. With these works on paper, Moore was not drawing simply as an exercise. Instead, the artist was drawing for ‘the pleasure of looking more intently and intensely’; emphasizing that these works on paper are not simply sketches, but instead illustrates important stages in Moore’s development as a draughtsman and sculptor.

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Biography

Henry Moore is perhaps the most influential public sculptor of the twentieth century. Drawing on his studies of Classical, pre-Columbian and African art, Moore created original and truly modern sculptural forms with Abstractions of organic shapes as his primary motif. In addition, Moore is particularly well known for his reclining nudes and the “Mother and Child” series. 


Throughout his career, Moore utilized a wide range of techniques and media, such as line drawing and cross-hatching, gouache, chalk and crayon, to bring two-dimensional forms to life, creating impressions of movement and radiance and carving human forms from a sheet of paper in a similar fashion to the way in which he carved expressive forms from slabs of stone. With these works on paper, Moore was not drawing simply as an exercise. Instead, the artist was drawing for ‘the pleasure of looking more intently and intensely’; emphasizing that these works on paper are not simply sketches, but instead illustrates important stages in Moore’s development as a draughtsman and sculptor.

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