Henry Moore

Skip to main content
Photograph by John Bentham.
Henry Moore
Photograph by John Bentham.

Henry Moore

British, 1898 - 1986
BiographyEnglish sculptor and draughtsman. The son of a Yorkshire coalmining engineer, Moore studied at Leeds School of Art in 1919, after war service in France. In 1921 he won a scholarship to the Royal College, London, where, in addition to his studies, he spent much time in the British Museum. His work of this period, like the Reclining Figure (1929; Leeds, AG) shows the influence of Epstein and ‘primitive’ Mayan art. During the 1930s Moore was associated with the Hampstead artists, particularly NICHOLSON and HEPWORTH whom he joined in the7&5 Society in 1930 and Unit One in 1933, and moved to Chelsea School of Art (1932–9) which he found more progressive than the Royal College. The abstract biomorphic carvings of this period, including Family (1935; Henry Moore Foundation) and Square Form (1936; Norwich, Sainsbury Centre), are among his most innovative works and, in common with Hepworth, he also explored the potential of the pierced form, a stylistic device which was to bring him notoriety, in the 1930s. In 1940, through the diplomacy of KENNETH CLARK, Moore was commissioned as a WAR ARTIST and his drawings of sleepers in the Underground during the Blitz are among the most moving records of the Home Front. During the 1940s he established an international reputation which was confirmed by the award of the International Sculpture Prize at the Venice Biennale of 1948. During the 1950s monumental reclining female figures, of varying degrees of abstraction, dominated his work, culminating in the Reclining Figure carved for the UNESCO building, Paris, in 1957. He also produced increasing numbers of modelled and cast figures and through the 1960s experimented with sculptures in several parts, creating tension between the individual elements, as in Double Figure (London, outside Westminster Cathedral). Moore's output, from the 1960s until his death, was enormous and entailed the employment of many studio assistants; public and corporate commissions were matched by the sale of small maquettes, in limited editions, to satisfy individual collectors and inevitably the work is of uneven quality. There is, however, no doubt of his stature in 20th-century sculpture. Determinedly humanist, even at his most abstract, his forms evolved to chart human awareness and anxieties in a changing world. Vitality was the quality in sculpture that for him defined success or failure, a force unrelated to traditional concepts of beauty, revealed through the energy contained within the work. SOURCE, (Oxford Art Online, http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t118/e1789?q=henry+moore&search=quick&pos=2&_start=1#firsthit) Accessed Oct 31, 2016.
Person TypeIndividual