Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue
The Meaning of Modern Sculpture.
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12136161164Plates 8b102324(4 illus) Henry Moore.
Photographs of four carvings by Moore: "He believes that permanent shapes in permanent materials must symbolise universal and permanent ideas." One of the illustrations Reclining Woman 1930 green Hornton stone is captioned and cited in the texts as 'Mountains'.
For New York edition see 0009165. Reprinted by A.M.S. Press (See 0002685)."
Bib. Number0009311
The Meaning of Modern Sculpture.
Author/EditorWILENSKI R.H.
PublisherFaber and Faber
Place PublishedLondon
Year1932
Date & Collationxx,172pp.24 plates.Bibliog.
LanguageEnglish
More InformationSubtitled: An essay on some original sculpture of the present day together with some account of the methods of professional disseminators of the notion that certain sculptors in ancient Greece were the first and the last to achieve perfection in sculpture."12136161164Plates 8b102324(4 illus) Henry Moore.
Photographs of four carvings by Moore: "He believes that permanent shapes in permanent materials must symbolise universal and permanent ideas." One of the illustrations Reclining Woman 1930 green Hornton stone is captioned and cited in the texts as 'Mountains'.
For New York edition see 0009165. Reprinted by A.M.S. Press (See 0002685)."