Skip to main content

Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue

Search

Skip to main content
Sort:
Filters
9 results for *
0020556
Author/Editor: MORIARTY Catherine.
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: Much Hadham, Aldershot
Year: 2003
Date & Collation: 134pp.illus.Chronology.Bibliog.
Description: Published in the British Sculptors and Sculpture series. Includes several mentions of Moore, who was an assistant to Ledward.
0020666
Author/Editor: COMPTON Ann
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: Hertfordshire
Year: 2004
Date & Collation: 143pp.Illus.Chronoloy.Bibliog.
Description: Published in asssociation with Lund Humphries.
Henry Moore is mentioned several times in this study of Jagger's career. Moore appears along side other artists of the same period in Compton's introduction and is mentioned in connection with Charles Holden's London Underground headquarters on page 85. 'These works were not only intergrated as part of the design of the façade but were also 'hewn out of the rough stone with all the rugged crudity of its material still evident''. There are one or two other references to Moore in Chapter 4 'Modelling and Sculpture' including Jagger's comment on a Reclining Woman made to the Morning Post.
Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 1: 1916-29; edited by Ann GARROULD.
0017164
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 1996
Date & Collation: xi,244pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibits.Index of Titles.Preface David MITCHINSON.Introduction Ann Garrould.
Description:

Published by the Henry Moore Foundation is association with Lund Humphries.The third volume to appear in the six-volume catalogue raisonné of Moore's drawings 1916-1983.
Sketchbooks featured include: History of Sculpture: notes (See 0010603) and Sketchbook 1928: The West Wind Relief (See also 0001543).
Title as printed: Henry Moore. Volume 1: Complete Drawings 1916-29.
Introduction by Ann Garrould pp.ix-x:
The publication of Volume 1 of the catalogue raisonne of Henry Moore's drawings anticipates the centenary of his birth by two years. In the space of those hundred years, the arts of painting and sculpture have experienced a wide variety of innovations - Cubism to Conceptual Art, Bourdelle to the bricks in the Tate, Matisse's Snail to Damien Hirst's Sheep. Drawing, on the other hand, does not lend itself to innovations. Rather, it is a measure of an individual's skill in conveying the sense of volume of a three-dimensional object on a two-dimensional surface. Sculptures today can be made of marble, fibreglass, scrap metals or animals preserved in formaldehyde. Paintings can be in tempera, oils or acrylic paints. Leonardo da Vinci and Albrecht Durer drew in pen and.ink, sepia, charcoal: little has changed over the centuries, although Moore did use ballpoint pens when they were invented in the 1950s. Moore believed passionately that good draughtsmanship was the basis of painting and sculpture. He would frequently quote lngres's dictum about drawing being the probity of art, and claimed that it was possible to discern the quality of a sculptor from his drawings.

Moore's earliest extant work on paper was done in a friend's autograph book, a copy in pencil and watercolour of Turner's Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus signed H. S. Moore 19/2/16. Would that Moore had always been so precise in signing and dating his work. Drawings with neither signature nor date are a minefield for the would-be cataloguer. Add to this the fact that in later life Moore adopted a somewhat cavalier approach to dating his earlier drawings, simply hazarding a guess at their date (something he did on more than one occasion in my presence) and the cataloguer's problems are considerably increased. Having had access to the letters Moore wrote to Alice Gostick from 1917 onwards, and to other letters written to members of his family, I have been able to make a close study of his handwriting as it changed over the years. As a consequence I believe it is possible to determine in the majority of cases whether a signature and date are contemporaneous with the drawing or whether Moore added one or both later - sometimes many years - later. Assigning an undated drawing to a particular year on stylistic grounds alone can in Moore's case be rather risky, since he was in the habit of reviewing and occasionally reworking earlier drawings. For example, in the 1950s he reworked drawings he had made in 1937-38, and in 1980 and 1981 he reviewed works of the 1920s and 1930s, producing new drawings based upon them.

In the early 1970s Moore had occasion to review all his drawings with Alan Wilkinson, who had made them the subject of his doctoral thesis. At that time Moore signed many of his early drawings and added dates, partly by guesswork and partly by comparing the drawings with other dated works. Where such dates proved incorrect the drawings concerned have been assigned to the year in which I believe they were actually executed. Where drawings appear to have been misdated when judged on stylistic grounds alone, such drawings (with very few exceptions) have been catalogued under the year to which Moore assigned them.

During the decade 1920-29 Moore was evolving his own approach to drawing. Initially, as a student at the Royal College of Art, he had to attend life classes and draw as instructed by his tutor. Out of college hours he would visit the British Museum and fill small notebooks with rapid pencil sketches of primitive sculptures. In the evenings he and other students paid for tuition in drawing; their tutor was Leon Underwood, to whom Moore was later to pay tribute. Other evenings at home were spent drawing his own ideas for sculptures. Volume 1 of the catalogue raisonne includes eight notebooks. The earliest, dating from 1920, contains mostly Moore's notes and ideas on sculpture, with some sketches. David Mitchinson has had the opportunity of working on the extant pages of this notebook, and has as far as possible reconstructed it.

The last notebook in this volume is Sketchbook 1928:West Wind relief, in which Moore recorded ideas for his first public commission, a carving on the London Under­ ground headquarters at 55 Broadway, St James's.

At about this time, when Paul Klee was, as he put it, ‘Taking a line for a walk’, Moore began to develop a new way of representing three-dimensional forms on a flat surface. He called this ‘sectional-line drawing’ and continued to use it, on and off, for the next half century. He explained this method of drawing ‘line both down the form as well as around it, without using light and shade’. The earliest use of such a line may be seen in HMF 199a where it describes the curve of the torso. Here Moore used only single lines to describe the swelling form. It was not until 1928 that he returned to the idea, combining sectional-line drawing with the conventional use of chiaroscuro as in HMF 575 and 603.

As the 1920s drew to a close, Moore could look back on an eventful decade. At the end of his three years as a student at the Royal College of Art he had been awarded a travelling scholarship to Italy, to study the Old Masters. He had also been given a seven-year contract as a sculpture assistant at the Royal College so he was able to enjoy the security afforded by a regular income. In 1926 and 1927 he had sent works to group exhibitions in London galleries, and in 1928 he had had his first one-man show at the Warren Gallery in Maddox Street, London. Amongst those who bought drawings included in this exhibition were Jacob Epstein, Augustus John and Henry Lamb. In the autumn term of 1928 Moore met a young Russian girl who was studying painting at the Royal College of Art. In July 1929 he married her. The new decade beckoned.

Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 2, 1930-39: edited by Ann GARROULD.
0017996
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 1998
Date & Collation: xi,264pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibitions.Concordance.Index of Titles.Preface by David MITCHINSON.Introduction by Ann GARROULD.
Description: Published by The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries. Distributed in the USA by Antique Collectors' Club.The fourth volume to appear in the six-volume catalogue raisonné of Moore's drawings 1916-1983.
The 1930s was one of the most inventive and productive of Moore's career. Life Drawings of Irina Moore. Natural forms collected during holidays on the Norfolk and Suffolk coast led to the Transformation drawings. Hampstead in the 1930s. Contacts with the Surrealists. Mathematical models in the Science Museum. Wallace Collection suits of armour, and Moore's Interior and Exterior theme. Moore employed wax crayons and used colour in his drawings. Mentions also Moore's small notebooks, the bungalow at Burcroft in Kent, and the difficulty of dating many of the drawings.Individual sketchbooks featured: Blue Drawing Book c1936-1937, Drawing Book 1930, Ideas for Sculpture Drawing Book c1939-1940, No 1 Drawing Book c1930-1931, No 2 Drawing Book c1930-1934, Shiny Notebook 1933-1935, Sizewell Sketchpad 1931, Sketchbook 1934-1935, Sketchbook c1939-1940, Sketchbook B c1935, Sketchbook of Sculptural Ideas 1937, Small Notebook c1934-1935, Square Forms and Lyre Birds Sketchbook 1936 etc., Square Forms Sketchbook 1934.
Title as printed: Henry Moore. Volume 2: Complete Drawings 1930-39.
Includes some 1940 drawings.
Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 7, 1984-86, Addenda and Index 1916-86; edited by Ann GARROULD
0020554
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 2003
Date & Collation: xiv,242pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibitions.Concordance.Sketchbooks.Index of Titles.Preface by David MITCHINSON.Introduction by Ann GARROULD.
Description: The last volume in the series catalogues drawings 1984-86, Addenda, and an Index to all Volumes 1916-86.
Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 6, 1982-83; edited by Ann GARROULD.
0016048
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 1994
Date & Collation: xi,192pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibitions.Index of titles.Concordance.Preface by David Mitchinson.Introduction by Ann Garrould.
Description: Published by The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries. The second volume to be published in a six-volume catalogue raisonné of Moore's drawings 1916-1983. Ann Garrould writes of Moore in old age, and how from 1982 Moore seems to have become less critical of his drawing skills". David Mitchinson points out that the drawings from 1984 until 1986 remain in the Foundation but without full documentation and without being photographed.
Individual sketchbooks featured: Black Notebook 1982Sketchbook 1982-1983.
Title as printed: Henry Moore Volume 6 Complete Drawings 1982-83."
Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 5, 1977-81; edited by Ann GARROULD.
0016047
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 1994
Date & Collation: xii,272pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibitions.Index of titles.Concordance.Preface David Mitchinson.Introduction by Ann Garrould.
Description: Published by the Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries. The first volume to be published in a six volume catalogue raisonné of Moore's drawings 1916-1983.
David Mitchinson outlines the history of the work on recording Moore's drawings, and the symbols used for sculpture (LH), graphics (GGM), drawings (HMF) and drawings catalogue raisonné (AG).
The introduction comments on Moore's output of drawings in the period covered, and the range of subject matter.
In this catalogue raisonné, The Hamlet drawings cited in 0013979 are given under the following titles:
80(100) Two Figures in a Setting, 1980 drawing ( ).
80(104) Profile Head with Sectional Lines, 1980 drawing (Hamlet).
80(121) Northern Landscape: Iceberg, 1980 drawing (To Be or Not to Be).
80(146) Woman Contemplating, 1980 drawing (The Mad Ophelia).
80(204) Seated and Reclining Figures, 1980 drawing ( ).
80(279) Girl Resting, 1980 drawing (Ophelia).
80(280) King and Queen, 1980 drawing (King and Queen).
81(27) Drawing for Metal Sculpture, 1981 drawing ( ).
82(7) Head, 1982 drawing ( ).
82(22) Sea and Sky II, 1982 drawing ( ).
See note on page 102 entry AG 80.100.
Individual sketchbooks featured: Animals Notebook 1979, Animals Notebooks 1979 and 1982, Cream Notebook 1980, Green Notebook c1979,Italian Notebook 1979, Reclining Mother and Child Notebook 1979, Sketchbook 1980, Sketchbook 1980-1981, White Notebook 1977.
Title as printed: Henry Moore Volume 5 Complete Drawings 1977-81.
Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 3, 1940-49; edited by Ann GARROULD.
0019388
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 2001
Date & Collation: xii,337pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibitions.Concordance.Index of Titles.Preface by David MITCHINSON.Introduction by Ann GARROULD.
Description: Moore was 41 at the outbreak of war. His cottage in Kent was a restricted area because of its proximity to the coast. Chelsea School of Art had closed so that he no longer had income from teaching. Stone and wood would soon become difficult to acquire. So Moore turned to drawing, and was persuaded by Kenneth Clark to become a War Artist. Other graphic work at the time included textile designs for Ascher, and book illustrations for The Rescue (See 0008810) and Prométhée (See 0008261). Individual sketchbooks featured: Sketchbook 1940., First Shelter Sketchbook, Second Shelter Sketchbook, Shelter Sketchbook 1940-1941, Horizontal Notebook, Large Shelter Sketchbook, Coalmining Notebook A, Coalmining Notebook B, Coalmining Subjects Sketchbook, Coalmine Sketchbook, Upright Sketchbook, Sketchbook 1942, Textile Design Sketchbook 1, Textile Design Sketchbook 2, textile Design Sketchbook 3, Madonna and Child Sketchbook, Family Group Notebook, Vertical Sketchbook, The Rescue Sketchbook, Sketchbook of the Artist's Wife and Child, Rocking Chair Notebook, Sketchbook 1947-49, Prométhée Sketchbook. Some other subjects, or multiple titles: Family Groups, Figure Studies, Ideas for Sculpture, Illustration for a Poem by Herbert Read, Madonna and Child Studies, Mother and Child Studies, Reclining Figures, Seated Figures, Sleeping Figures, Standing Figures. Also Includes some 1950 drawings.
Title as printed: Henry Moore Volume 3 Complete Drawings 1940-49.
Henry Moore: Complete Drawings, Volume 4, 1950-76; edited by Ann GARROULD
0020553
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation in association with Lund Humphries
Place Published: London and Much Hadham
Year: 2003
Date & Collation: xii,385pp.Illus.Bibliog.List of Exhibitions.Concordance.Index of Titles.Preface by David MITCHINSON.Introduction by Ann Garrould.
Description: Spanning 26 years, this volume includes documents drawings used as illustrations for Jacquetta Hawkes' 'A Land' (See 0008129) in 1950 through the U.N.E.S.C.O. notebooks of 1954-57 to the drawings used as the basis for the Reclining Figures album (see 0000000) in 1969-77.