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0022625
Author/Editor: FELDMAN Anita
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Perry Green
Year: 2013
Date & Collation: (29 March - 27 October 2013)144pp.Illus.Chronology.Works.Notes
Description: Catalogue of the exhibition shown at The Henry Moore Foundation 29 March - 27 October 2013 and Compton Verney, Warwickshire 15 February - 31 August 2014. Catalogue in 8 chapters, 3 essays and 1 edited interview. 6-7 Forward by Richard CALVOCORESSI and Steven PARISSIEN. 9-14 Introduction by Anita FELDMAN Catalogue Anita FELDMAN 15-26 1. Drawing from Life: Examination of Moore and Rodin's study and drawings from life, from the body, bones and found natural forms. 27-36 2. Black and Underground: comparison between Moore's Shelter drawings and Rodin's 'Black drawings'; the use and symbolism of "darkness"; avoidance of depicting individuals and anonymity of figures relating to all of mankind and transcending the particular. 37-54 3. Figure and Landscape: study of the shared interest in the fusion of figure and environment, whether architectural or surrounding landscape. 55-60 4. Pressure Beneath the Surface: Moore's examination and thoughts on Rodin and both artists' familiarity with the works of Michelangelo. 61-66 5. Interlocking and Compacted Forms: exploration of the essence of sculptural form, including forms within forms; internal/external; groupings of interrelated forms. 67-82 6. Fragments and Torsos: Both artists collected antiquities and found objects and interspersed fragments with their own figures. Shared preoccupation with the torso and condensation of the body to its most essential and purest form. 83-92 7. Repetition and Variation: Study of how Moore and Rodin repeated a sculptural form within the same composition, often with subtle variations. 93-98 8. Finished/Unfinished: Reworking and the chance and the use of accidental markings; tool marking, casting seams, weld and pointing marks and other markings of industrial fabrication as aesthetic components of work. 99-108 Moore, Rodin and Photography - One takes photographs, the other doesn't by Hélène PINET. Essay on their use and approach to photography and how photography progressed in line with their fame. 109-118 Rodin and Moore's Collections by Mary MOORE. Detailing Moore's collection of paintings, ethnographic sculpture, pottery, Renaissance and medieval artefacts, exotic shells and fragments of natural materials, displayed in the yellow sitting room at Hoglands; and Rodin's collection of Greek and Egyptian antiquities, paintings, engravings, Japanese drawings and prints, acting as a personal visual reference library. 119-126 Larger Figures, Simpler Forms by François BLANÇHETIÈRE. Essay on scale and the techniques adopted by Rodin, including enlargement and fragmentation. 127-130 Rodin, A Conversation - Henry Moore with Alan BOWNESS. Edited interview with Moore talking about Rodin. 131-132 Chronology - Auguste Rodin 133-134 Chronology - Henry Moore 135-140 Works in the Exhibition
0023045
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Perry Green
Year: 2014
Date & Collation: (1 May - 26 October) 128pp.Illus.Works in the exhibition.Biographies.Credits.Texts by Richard CALVOCORESSI, Anita FELDMAN and Tony CRAGG
Description: Catalogue to accompany exhibition of the same name. Foreward by Richard CALVOCORESSI describing the exhibition as the first to 'look at the different ways in which Moore's rich sculptural vocabulary has been absorbed, reinterpreted and extended by contemporary artists, not always uncritically'. 15-37 Anita FELDMAN writes on Body & Void referring to the work of exhibiting artists; art critics Michael FRIED, David COHEN and Clement GREENBERG; work by other contemporary artists including Jenny Saville, David Nash, Anish Kapoor, Mark Leckle and Pierre Huyghe; and artists who have adopted a strategy of disempowering Moore's sculpture including PaulMcCarthy, and Julian Opie. 38-117 Plates and artist statements: Joseph Beuys, Keith Coventry, Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Anthony Gormley, Roger Hiorns, Damien Hirst, Des Hughes, Anish Kapoor, Richard Long, Sarah Lucas, Paul McDevitt, Bruce McLean, Bruce Nauman, Paul Noble, Thomas Schütte, Simon Starling and Rachel Whiteread.
0020803
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Much Hadham
Year: 2004
Date & Collation: 56pp.(133 illus).Chronology.
Description: Henry Moore Collections and Exhibitions series. Catalogue of exhibition held at Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids. Introduction by Joseph Antenucci Becherer. This exhibiton was originally shown in the Sheep Field Barn at Perry Green, see 0020329 for catalogue entry.
Henry Moore Drawings: The Art of Seeing
0023952
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Much Hadham
Year: 2019
Date & Collation: 152pp.foreword by Godfrey Worsdale.Essay by Sebastiano Barassi.Plates and Commentary by Sylvia Cox.Index.Image Credits
Description:

Book published to accompany the exhibition Henry Moore Drawings: The Art of Seeing at Henry Moore Studios & Gardens. An essay by Sebastiano BARASSI offers a chronological survey of Moore's use of drawing, from his work as a schoolboy in Castleford to the late works of the 1980s.  pp.30-149 consists of illustrations of Moore's drawings, arranged in chronological order, interspersed with commentaries on 18 of these by Sylvia COX.

Commentaries on:

Reclining Male Nude 1922 (HMF 72)

Seated Nude with Mirror 1924 (HMF 261)

Half-Figure 1928 (HMF 661)

Ideas for Sculpture: Transformation of Bones 1932 (HMF 941)

Mother and Child Studies 1933 (HMF 1005)

Mechanisms 1938 (HMF 1367)

Women and Children in the Tube 1940 (HMF 1726)

Coalminer with Pick 1942 (HMF 1987)

Textile Design: Framed Heads 1943 (HMF 2127)

Ideas for Wall Reliefs 1955 (HMF 2862)

Head 1950, 1958 (HMF 2979)

Two Reclining Figures 1961 (HMF 3052)

Pen Exercise IX: Horsemen Crossing a Mountain Crevasse 1970 (HMF 3248)

Reclining Figure in Illuminated Cave 1978 (HMF 78(18))

Girl Playing the Organ 1980 (HMF 80(207))

Two Standing Figures 1980 (HMF 80(282))

Mother and Child on Seashore II 1982 (HMF 82(223))

Hands 1984-86 (HMF 84/86(713))

Henry Moore and the Challenge of Architecture
0020800
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Much Hadham
Year: 2005
Date & Collation: 32pp.(102 illus).Text by Anita Feldman BENNETT
Description: Henry Moore collections and Exhibitions series. Catalogue of exhibition in the Sheep Field Barn, works to be changed and re-hung over a two-year period.
In his interviews and written statements, Moore repeated that he did not like working with architects, that doing so symbolised for him the subservient relationships between sculptor and architect, and that architects only thought of sculpture as an afterthought, as 'mere surface decoration'... This exhibition, in five sections, looks at both completed and abandoned projects to assess how Moore changed his approach to architecture throughout his career.
Becoming Henry Moore
0023483
Author/Editor: BARASSI Sebastiano, MOORE Tania, WOOD Jon
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Much Hadham
Year: 2017
Date & Collation: 128pp.Illus.A chronology of Moore's early life.Works in the exhibition.Illustration.Edited by Hannah Higham.credits.Acknowledgments.
Description:

The exhibition catalogue to accompany Becoming Henry Moore, presented at Henry Moore Studios and Gardens, Perry Green 14 April - 22 October 2017 and at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds 30 November 2017 - 18 February 2018. The exhibition contains 110 works with loans from 20 institutions, as well as from private lenders. There are 201 images in the catalogue not including the front cover. The Foreword by the Director of the Henry Moore Foundation, Godfrey Worsdale is followed by three substantial essays: 'A master in the making' by Sebastiano Barassi, Head of Collections and Exhibitions at the Henry Moore Foundation; 'The nation’s collections: Moore's personal wealth of influence' by Tania Moore, Curatorial Assistant at the Royal Academy of Arts; and 'Inner experience - Gudea, Sumerian sculpture and Henry Moore' by Dr Jon Wood, Research Curator at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.

Sebastiano Barassi's essay sets the context of Moore's formative years: his childhood and schooling in Castleford; the First World War; Leeds Art School; the Royal College of Art, and his early work. The essay begins with a quote from Moore taken from an interview by John Freeman in Hugh Barnett's Face to Face, 1964, where Moore tells of how, at about the age of 11, he was inspired to want to be a sculpture as a result of a Sunday School lesson on Michelangelo. The essay then goes on to reference subsequent key influencers and experiences including: his parents; the headmaster of Castleford Secondary School, T.R. Dawes and art teacher Alice Gostick; signing up to the Civil Service Rifles; being gassed at the battle of Cambrai in France in the First World War in February 1917; his time at Leeds Art School from 1919 to 1921 were he met Raymond Coxon and Barbara Hepworth; his scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London; his appreciation of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska; his visits to the British Museum; the influence of the pre-Columbian figure Chacmool; and the creation of his first masterpiece, the 1929 brown Hornton stone Reclining Figure (LH 59) - the centre piece of the exhibition Becoming Henry Moore; and his marriage in the same year to Irena Radetzski. Baressi's essay concludes in 1930, the year that Moore was selected to represent Great Britain at the Venice Biennale alongside Epstein and Skeaping.

Tania Moore's essay picks up the story focusing on the collections, artists and academics that influenced Moore, including: The Leeds Art College; Leeds Library; Roger Fry's Vision and Design; The National Gallery; The British Museum; The Tate; Leon Underwood; the Louvre; Museé Trocadéro and the National History Museum.

Jon Wood's essay starts with a quote taken from an article published in the Listener 5 June 1935 in which Moore expresses his appreciation of Sumerian art. This leads to an in-depth exploration of the interest that Moore and others had in Sumerian art and in particular, the figure of Gudea, Ruler of the City-State of Lagash II c 2120 BC. a 20th century cast of which, on loan from the British Museum, is a major feature of the Becoming Henry Moore exhibition. There is speculation as to where Moore first saw Gudea. There are detailed references to: The Development of Sumerian Art, 1935 and The Sumerians, 1928, by C. Leonard Woolley; The Meaning of Modern Sculpture, R.H. Wilenski, 1932; and Henry Moore: Sculpture, Herbert Read, 1934. Reference is made to: Moore's first exhibition at the Warren Gallery, London; to his membership of the Seven and Five Society and to Unit One, founded by Paul Nash; and to the artistic millieu, that included Ben Nicholson, Barbara Hepworth and Ivon Hitchens, that Moore and his wife Irena were part of, in Hampstead, where they lived and worked at 11a Park Hill Road. 

Moore and Mythology.
0021115
Publisher: The Henry Moore Foundation
Place Published: Much Hadham
Year: 2007
Date & Collation: 32pp.(108 illus).Text by David MITCHINSON.
Description: Henry Moore Collections and Exhibitions series. Catalogue of exhibition in the Sheep Field Barn. Exhibition displays work, 77 works on paper and 32 sculptural works, expressing both the optimism and the fragility of human existence; the end results of Moore involvement with the narratives of Odysseus and Prometheus in projects for Andre Gidés Le Prométhéé mal enchaÎné (1899) and The Rescue (1945) by Edward Sackville-West.