Skip to main content

Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue

Search

Skip to main content
Sort:
Filters
5 results for *
0009440
Publisher: Apollo
Place Published: London
Year: 1929
Date & Collation: (Aug)..
Description: Short exhibition review. "Mr Moore seems to rely on a set formula in order to create an effect of originality."
0009445
Publisher: Studio
Place Published: London
Year: 1929
Date & Collation: (Sept)..
Description: Brief review of St. George's Gallery exhibition in which Moore's drawings are described as rotating on their own mass"."
0009444
Publisher: Sphere
Place Published: London
Year: 1929
Date & Collation: (Jan)..(2 illus).
Description: Two photographs of St. James's Park Underground Headquarters under construction, showing the sculptors at work on scaffolding 100 feet above ground.
0009443
Author/Editor: WILENSKI R.H.
Publisher: Britannia
Place Published: London
Year: 1929
Date & Collation: (1 March) 286-287(1 Moore illus).
Description: The success of young British artists like Cedric Morris, John Armstrong and Alan Durst prove that the modern movement has come into its own. Includes a photograph of Horse, 1923 bronze and a paragraph on the thirty-one-year-old Moore, then Assistant Professor of Sculpture at the Royal College of Art, who had recently completed the North Wind commission. Horse...has the curious architectural rhythm of Chinese sculpture...""
0009442
Author/Editor: BAYER, Walter
Publisher: Architectural Review
Place Published: London
Year: 1929
Date & Collation: (Nov) 240-241(8 illus).Text signed Myras.
Description: Photographs of the sculptures on St. James's Park Underground station, two of each of the four winds, including Henry Moore's West Wind, 1928-1929 Portland stone. The locations on the building are given (Moore's work is on the north side of the east wing) and the total project is briefly surveyed. This article is preceded on pages 225-239 by an architectural feature on the whole building:
BAYER Walter. Sense and sensibility: the new head offices of the Underground railway, Westminster, London (Adams, Holden and Pearson, Architects).