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Manchester Art Gallery LH 4 Image online [15] Standing Woman [14] 1923 Walnut wood H 39 Manchester Art Gallery LH 5 Image online [16] Maternity [14] 1925 Hopton Wood stone H 22.9 Leeds Art Gallery LH 22 Image online [17] Mask [14] 1924 Green marble H 17.8 LH 21 Image online [18] Woman with Upraised Arms [19] 1925 Hopton Wood stone H 43.2 Henry ...
The Henry Moore Sculpture Centre in the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, opened in 1974. It comprises the world's largest public collection of Moore's work, most of it donated by him between 1971 and 1974.
Three Way Piece No.2: Archer is a large sculpture by the British artist Henry Moore. Two casts exist: cast 1 in Toronto, [2] cast 2 is owned by the National Gallery, Berlin. [3] The work is 340 cm long and 325 cm high. [4]
Family Group, LH 269, Tate Gallery. Family Group (LH 269) is a sculpture by Henry Moore.It was his first large-scale bronze sculpture, and his first large bronze with multiple castings.
Reclining Figure: Festival (LH 293) [1] is a bronze sculpture by English artist Henry Moore, commissioned by the Arts Council in 1949 for the Festival of Britain in 1951. The sculpture can be viewed as an abstraction of a reclining female human figure, resting on two arms, with a small head.
Four-Piece Composition: Reclining Figure (LH154) [1] is an important early stone sculpture by the English sculptor Henry Moore.He had been working on depictions of the reclining human figure since at least 1924, but this small piece, made in the latter half of 1934, is the first work in which Moore breaks a human figure down in to several separate pieces.
In 1962 Moore created an edition of 10 working models (LH 504) for a new two-piece sculpture. The Tate Gallery in London acquired a small working model in 1963. [3] Other working models are in the collections of the Gemeentemuseum in The Hague, the Didrichsen Art Museum in Helsinki, the Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester in Rochester, New York, and the Kunsthaus in Zurich.
UNESCO Reclining Figure 1957–58 is a sculpture by Henry Moore.It was made in a series of scales, from a small plaster maquette, through a half-size working model made in plaster and cast in bronze (LH 415), to a full-size version carved in Roman travertine marble in 1957–1958 (LH 416). [1]