Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue
Relief No.1
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Relief No.1
Date1959
Artwork TypeSculpture Summary
Catalogue NumberLH 450
Mediabronze
Dimensionsartwork with base (h x l x d): 231 × 136.5 × 76 cm
Ownershipedition summary - see individual casts for ownership
More InformationEdition summary
Bronze edition of 6+1 artist's copy
Foundries: Bildgiesserei Hermann Noack, Berlin and Morris Singer Foundry Ltd, Basingstoke
Current or last known owner - click on the 'related' tab below to find out more about specific works
cast 0: The Trustees of the Tate Gallery: gift of the artist 1978
cast 1: Norton Simon Art Foundation
cast 2: The Israel Museum, Jerusalem; gift of the artist 1973
cast 3: Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City: Acquired through the Mrs Alfred B. Clark Foundation
cast 4: private collection
cast 5: Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto: gift of Henry Moore 1974
cast 6: The Henry Moore Foundation: gift of the artist 1977
plaster, 1959: The Henry Moore Foundation: gift of the artist 1977
Remarks
'In the bronze sculpture Relief No.1 you know the middle and you know where the shoulder is. It has a centre, a kernel, and an organic logic'. Henry Moore, Hedgecoe (ed.), Henry Spencer Moore, 1968, p.391.
Relief No.1 1959 is a rare example of a free-standing relief sculpture in Moore’s work. The front surface comprises an undulating arrangement of shapes that suggest the schematic form of a female figure, which appears to be embedded within, or emerging from, the flat ground. Moore’s interest in relief sculpture in the late 1950s developed from architectural commissions and a trip to Pompeii, where he saw casts of bodies half buried in volcanic ash.
Bronze edition of 6+1 artist's copy
Foundries: Bildgiesserei Hermann Noack, Berlin and Morris Singer Foundry Ltd, Basingstoke
Current or last known owner - click on the 'related' tab below to find out more about specific works
cast 0: The Trustees of the Tate Gallery: gift of the artist 1978
cast 1: Norton Simon Art Foundation
cast 2: The Israel Museum, Jerusalem; gift of the artist 1973
cast 3: Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City: Acquired through the Mrs Alfred B. Clark Foundation
cast 4: private collection
cast 5: Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto: gift of Henry Moore 1974
cast 6: The Henry Moore Foundation: gift of the artist 1977
plaster, 1959: The Henry Moore Foundation: gift of the artist 1977
Remarks
'In the bronze sculpture Relief No.1 you know the middle and you know where the shoulder is. It has a centre, a kernel, and an organic logic'. Henry Moore, Hedgecoe (ed.), Henry Spencer Moore, 1968, p.391.
Relief No.1 1959 is a rare example of a free-standing relief sculpture in Moore’s work. The front surface comprises an undulating arrangement of shapes that suggest the schematic form of a female figure, which appears to be embedded within, or emerging from, the flat ground. Moore’s interest in relief sculpture in the late 1950s developed from architectural commissions and a trip to Pompeii, where he saw casts of bodies half buried in volcanic ash.