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Henry Moore's house, now the headquarters of the Henry Moore Foundation. The Henry Moore Foundation is a registered charity in England, established for education and promotion of the fine arts — in particular, to advance understanding of the works of Henry Moore, and to promote the public appreciation of sculpture more generally.
Henry Moore Foundation LH 25 Image online [23] Head of a Woman [24] 1926 Concrete H 22.8 The Hepworth Wakefield: LH 36 Image online [25] Standing Woman [24] 1926 Stone H 86.3 destroyed LH 33 Image online [26] Suckling Child [24] 1927 Concrete H 43.2 destroyed LH 42 Image online [27] Bird [24] 1927 Bronze H 22.8 Henry Moore Foundation LH 39 ...
The Henry Moore Foundation in their sculpture garden around his old house at Perry Green, Hertfordshire (on loan from Leeds Museums and Galleries) [2] David Winton Bell Gallery in Providence, Rhode Island. [3] Installed in 1963 on the main campus green at Brown University. [4] It is catalogued as LH513. [3]
The lead sculpture, called Mother and Child, was believed to have been made by Moore in 1939-40 and will be auctioned in March. ‘Unique and rare’ Henry Moore sculpture discovered on family’s ...
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.
Works of Milow are included in public collections, such as Tate Galleries, Imperial War Museum, Henry Moore Foundation, Leeds City Art Gallery, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest), Museum of Modern Art (NYC), Guggenheim Museum, Walker Art Center, Dallas Museum of Art, Denver Art Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario ...
The review panel of the Henry Moore Foundation, in Perry Green, Hertfordshire, determine that the sculpture is not by Moore, partly because it is made of aluminium, a material not used by Moore. The work is found to be by the late Betty Jewson (1914–1981), a British artist who once lived at Mergate Hall. [ 60 ]
Oval with Points is a series of enigmatic abstract sculptures by British sculptor Henry Moore, made in plaster and bronze from 1968 to 1970, from a 14-centimetre (5.5 in) maquette in 1968 (LH 594) made in plaster and then cast in bronze, through a 110-centimetre (43 in) working model in 1968–1969 (LH 595) also made plaster and then cast in bronze, to a full-size 332-centimetre (131 in ...