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Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue

2022 Eastbourne, Towner Art Gallery, A Life in Art: Lucy Wertheim

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2022 Eastbourne, Towner Art Gallery, A Life in Art: Lucy Wertheim
2022 Eastbourne, Towner Art Gallery, A Life in Art: Lucy Wertheim
2022 Eastbourne, Towner Art Gallery, A Life in Art: Lucy Wertheim

2022 Eastbourne, Towner Art Gallery, A Life in Art: Lucy Wertheim

11 June 2022 - 25 September 2022
Lucy Carrington Wertheim (1883-1971) supported many public galleries and young artists, and bequeathed over 50 works to Towner Art Gallery. This exhibition will bring together paintings, drawings and sculptures from her disbanded collection for the first time in 50 years alongside works exhibited in the Wertheim Gallery, which she established in 1930. The exhibition includes Moore’s Head of a Girl which was shown at the Wertheim Gallery’s opening exhibition.

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In 1971 Lucy Carrington Wertheim (1883-1971) bequeathed over 50 works to Towner Art Gallery following a long association with the gallery and friendship with David Galer the curator. Within this gift were paintings by Christopher Wood, Frances Hodgkins, Cedric Morris, Phelan Gibb and Alfred Wallis, now key works in Towner's permanent collection. 2021 marked 50 years since Wertheim's gift and therefore an opportune moment to celebrate this pioneering female gallerist by reuniting works from her collection and the artists she fervently championed in an ambitious exhibition.

 

During her lifetime Wertheim generously supported many public galleries, whether through gifts or exhibition loans. She passionately believed that young British artists should have the same opportunities as their European counterparts, a belief which led to her opening her own London-based gallery in 1930, the Wertheim Gallery, and initiating the Twenties Group, an exhibiting collective for artists in their twenties.

 

Wertheim was embedded in the inter-war arts scene; she surrounded herself with artists such as Frances Hodgkins, Christopher Wood, Helmut Kolle and Kenneth Hall and sought out young and unknown talent to show at her gallery. Her own instinctive taste was reflected in the bold, vibrant na'i've' style that characterised the work of so many of these artists. Her dedication to 'her artists' spanned five decades, during which she amassed a significant collection of paintings and drawings, mounted hundreds of exhibitions, loaned to schools, and gifted many works to galleries and museums both nationally and internationally.

 

Though Wertheim is known among specialist gallerists and collectors, she is relatively unknown by the broader public - although they are familiar with many of the artists she represented. A Life in Art will introduce new audiences to Lucy Wertheim, highlighting how she supported, motivated and showcased the artists that she discovered. Paintings, drawing and sculptures from her disbanded collection will be brought together again for the first time in 50 years alongside works exhibited in the Wertheim Gallery. The exhibition will illustrate the significance of the close relationships she developed with her artists and the impact of her patronage on their careers. Wertheim's voice will form part of the exhibition narrative, through extracts from letters and her memoir Adventure in Art, published in 1947.


The exhibition includes Moore’s Head of a Girl, 1923, which was formerly in Wertheim’s collection and remained in her home until her death in 1971. In her memoir, Wertheim wrote of Moore, “I fell under the spell of his work in 1928 and within a year had acquired from him ‘The Reclining Nude’ in alabaster, ‘Head of a Girl’, and two smaller carvings in addition to numerous drawings.”

2022 Aalborg, Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, A World of Marble
04 March 2022 - 21 August 2022
Exhibition Info: A World of Marble will examine how marble as a tradition-bound material is understood and interpreted through modern and contemporary art. The exhibition forms part of the celebration of the 50-year anniversary of the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art’s iconic marble building designed by world-famous Finnish architect Alvar Aalto.
photo: Sebastiano Barassi
16 September 2022 - 31 March 2023
Exhibition Info: 50 years after the exhibition at the Forte di Belvedere, the English master Henry Moore returns to Florence. Two sculptures, Large Interior Form and Family Group, are exhibited respectively in Piazza della Signoria and outside the front entrance of the Abbey of San Miniato al Monte.
2022-23 St Albans/Doncaster, Henry Moore: Drawing in the Dark
16 December 2022 - 26 August 2023
Exhibition Info: Drawing in the Dark is the largest exhibition to date of Moore’s coalmining drawings, completed in 1942 for the War Artists’ Advisory Committee. When Moore was asked to record the coalminers working to power wartime Britain, he chose to visit the mine his father had worked in, Wheldale Colliery in Castleford, where he spent a week drawing from observation. Subsequently, he worked from memory to create the remaining drawings which were all completed within six months. This fascinating body of work reveals the back-breaking labour endured by nearly 3/4 million miners as they made their vital contribution to Britain's war effort, while also providing new insights into Moore’s life and artistic process.
1968 London, Tate Gallery, Henry Moore
17 July 1968 - 22 September 1968
Exhibition Info: Retrospective exhibition of sculptures and drawings organised by the Arts Council of Great Britain and held at the Tate Gallery in honour of Moore's 70th birthday.
photo: Sarah Mercer
08 June 2024 - 22 September 2024
Exhibition Info: This focused exhibition in the Gilbert and Ildiko Butler Drawings Gallery considers Henry Moore’s celebrated Shelter drawings as the point of departure for a new reading of the artist’s fascination with images of the wall, during and immediately after World War II.
photo: Stathis Mamalakis
12 September 2024 - 26 October 2024
Exhibition Info: Now open at Gagosian’s Athens gallery until 26 October, Henry Moore and Greece is the first exhibition of Moore’s work in Greece for twenty years.
2022 Norwich, SCVA, Visions of Ancient Egypt
03 September 2022 - 01 January 2023
Exhibition Info: The Sainsbury Centre presents a major new exhibition exploring the enduring appeal of ancient Egypt in art and design from the ancient past to the present day. Over 150 works drawn from collections in the UK and internationally will examine how ancient Egypt has shaped our cultural imagination. From antiquity, when the Great Pyramid was revered as a wonder of the ancient world, to the Cleopatra of Shakespeare’s stage, this ground-breaking exhibition explores this ongoing engagement with ancient Egypt and charts its many forms across centuries of art and design. The exhibition examines how the iconic motifs and visual styles of Egypt have been re-imagined and re-invented over time – revealing a history closely entwined with conquest and colonial politics.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. photo: Antoinette Hachler
12 May 2023 - 09 June 2024
Exhibition Info: The first exhibition to examine in parallel the works of Georgia O'Keeffe and Henry Moore and their contributions to the artistic development of the 20th century, centring on the attention to natural forms that underpinned both artists' creative processes.
photo: Nigel Moore
02 May 2022 - 19 June 2022
Exhibition Info: Me, Myself, I: Artists’ Self-Portraits is a major exhibition at the Royal West of England Academy (RWA), Bristol, exploring how artists from 1720 to 2022 have imagined and seen themselves. It is the first large-scale exhibition at the RWA following a major redevelopment project.
photo: Rob Harris
01 April 2022 - 30 October 2022
Exhibition Info: Henry Moore: The Sixties presents a fascinating insight into Moore’s life and work during this pivotal decade in his career. The exhibition reveals the dramatic shift in his working practices that enabled him to work on an increasingly monumental scale; his move towards greater abstraction; and the enormous global demand for his work during this period, along with the controversy this generated. The exhibition feautures sculptures, drawings, graphics and archive material drawn entirely from the Henry Moore Foundation’s collection.
photo: Ken Adlard
27 May 2022 - 04 September 2022
Exhibition Info: This exhibition takes as its starting point the artist’s early fascination with the Neolithic site of Stonehenge and continued exploration of the upright abstract form. Moore first encountered the prehistoric monument under the moonlight as a young man in 1921. He was inspired by the grandeur of the idea – a powerful and primal work of art set in the landscape.