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Large Four Piece Reclining Figure 1972–73 at Harvard University.. Large Four Piece Reclining Figure 1972–73 (LH 629) is a bronze sculpture by Henry Moore.Approximately 4 metres (13 ft) long, the sculpture was made an edition of seven full size casts (plus an artist's copy), all cast by the Hermann Noack foundry in Berlin.
Reclining Figure 1938 (LH 192) is a small sculpture by Henry Moore of an sinuous abstracted human figure. An enlarged version was made in 1984 for the Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation, Singapore. The resulting Large Reclining Figure (LH 192b) is some 9 metres (30 ft) long, making it the largest sculpture made by Moore.
Moore scaled up the earlier sculpture up to carve in wood, creating a unique work which measures 94 by 200.7 by 76.2 centimetres (37.0 in × 79.0 in × 30.0 in). It is one of six large reclining figures in elmwood carved by Moore between 1935 and 1978.
Reclining Figure No.5 [277] 1952 Bronze L 21.6 LH 333 Image online [280] Reclining Figure No.5 [277] 1952 Bronze L 21.6 LH 330 Image online [281] Draped Reclining Figure: Fragment [277] 1953 Bronze L 16 LH 332a Reclining Figure: Festival [282] [283] 1951 Bronze L 228 Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art: LH 293 Reclining Figure: External ...
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.
Hakone Open-Air Museum Archived 2014-08-13 at the Wayback Machine, Henry Moore Foundation; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Henry Moore Foundation; Art theft: some of the famous art heists of the last 100 years, The Telegraph; Celebrating Moore: Works from the Collection of the Henry Moore Foundation, p. 39-40; Gallery of Lost Art