Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue
Two Piece Reclining Figure No.2
Two Piece Reclining Figure No.2
stamped Moore, 0/7
Two Piece
Reclining Figure: No.2 combines the subjects of figure and landscape, with
human forms dissolving into rocks and cliffs. The highly textured surface of
the black, boulder-like forms suggest jagged cliffs, which rise up from the base
like the eroded limestone coast at Durdle Door in Lulworth, Dorset. Though
abstracted, the features of a reclining figure are also visible; a raised head,
angular knees and feet planted firmly on the ground.
Moore’s interest in dismembered figures or bodies with missing parts
dates to the 1930s; but in the series of large, two-piece reclining figures of
1959-61, of which this is the second, he recognised that he was using the
spaces between the discrete forms more sculpturally than ever before – they
were an integral part of the work. He also realised that by splitting the
composition in two, the sculpture had a much closer relationship to landscape -
knees and breasts become mountains, the expectation of a naturalistic
representation of human form is removed and many different views become
possible.