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Henry Moore

Henry Moore: On Being a Sculptor

Henry Spencer Moore (1898–1986) was arguably the most influential British sculptor of the twentieth century. Brought up in Castleford in Yorkshire, Moore ended his life completing commissions for large-scale public sculptures in countries around the world. The scale of Moore's success in later life has tended to obscure the radical nature of his achievement. Rejecting the influence of his teachers and inspired by works from other cultures he saw in museums, Moore championed direct carving, evolving abstract sculptures derived from the human body. He was involved in the modernist Seven and Give Society and later in Unit One. Written by Henry Moore in the 1930s, these three powerful, polemical texts lay out his ideas about sculpture, calling for truth to materials, openness to other sculptural traditions and understanding of the importance of scale. Illustrated with archival photographs and with an introduction by his daughter Mary Moore, this book gives new insights into Moore's working methods and inspiration and speaks directly to artists today.
29 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2013
Publication year
2013
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Quotes

  • Ira Erthas quoted9 years ago
    Every material has its own individual qualities. It is only when the sculptor works direct, when there is an active relationship with his material, that the material can take its part in the shaping of an idea. Stone, for example, is hard and concentrated and should not be falsified to look like soft flesh – it should not be forced beyond its constructive build to a point of weakness. It should keep its hard tense stoniness
  • Ira Erthas quoted9 years ago
    And I use drawing as a method of study and observation of natural forms (drawings from life, drawings of bones, shells etc.)
  • Ira Erthas quoted9 years ago
    Complete sculptural expression is form in its full spatial reality.

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