Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue
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Summary of proposed Much Hadham neighbourhood plan for the period up to 2033. The parish is required to build at least 54 new homes over this period; the proposed plan sets out where these are to be.
Cover image of Large Upright Internal/External Form at the Henry Moore Foundation, Perry Green.
Booklet with ten walks around the 20th and 21st century public art available in London. Four of the walks include works by Henry Moore:
1. The Scarlet Walk (Kensington & Hyde Park) has The Arch (LH 503c) in Kensington Gardens.
2. The Ochre Walk (The City & Bankside) visits the Circular Altar (LH 630) in the church of St. Stephen Walbrook.
3. The Burnt Sienna Walk (Mayfair & St. James's) passes Time/Life Screen (LH 344), New Bond Street.
4. The Violet Walk (Pimlico) includes four Moore sculptures: Locking Piece (LH 515), Two Piece Reclining Figure No.1 (LH 457), Knife Edge Two Piece (LH 516), and West Wind (LH 58).
The blurbs for two other stops mention Moore: the description of the Royal College of Art (Scarlet Walk) names Moore as an alumnus; Moore is mentioned as an influence on Michael Chapman, whose In the Beginning aka Christ Child at St. Martin-in-the-Fields is included on the Turquoise Walk (Covent Garden).
Various other locations with connections to Moore's life and sculpture are visited on the walks, including Tate Britain, British Museum, and the Hayward Gallery.
Guide to What's On at the Wallace Collection. Cover illustration is Upright Internal/External Form, and the exhibition Henry Moore: The Helmet Heads is mentioned on the cover.
p.4: one-page blurb for Henry Moore: The Helmet Heads with facing illustration of Moore with Helmet Head No.2.
p.15: 8th May introduction to and tour of the Helmet Heads exhibition for blind and partially-sighted visitors.
p.24: 21st June concert accompanying the Helmet Heads exhibition - Henry Moore: Sculpting Musical Friendships. Works by Benjamin Britten and Igor Stravinsky, both friends of Moore, performed, along with Tchaikovsky's Souvenir de Florence in honour of Moore's links with that city.