The NGA's entrance featured
, from left, "Knife Edge Mirror Two Piece" (1976-78) and
"Goslar Warrior" (1973-74). Photograph by Stephen May.
By Stephen May
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Over the course of a celebrated, six-decade
career, British artist Henry Moore (1898-1986) came to personify
Twentieth Century sculpture, especially through the large public
works that made him one of the most recognized artists in world
history.
Organized in rough chronological order, the sprawling show
emphasizes stages and themes in the artist's oeuvre. It traces
crucial phases in Moore's development from the pioneering work of
the 1920s, to experimentation with abstraction and surrealism in
the 1930s, to drawings of the war's devastating effects in London
during World War II, to postwar focus on human relationships in
his imagery, to the large-scale outdoor sculpture of the last
quarter century of his life.
For varied reasons, Moore fell out of favor with critics toward
the end of his prolific career. They felt the one-time radical
sculptor had become passé. But of late he has been making a
comeback, aided by exhibitions and critical reexaminations such
as this show and its scholarly catalogues.
Included are over 100 works of sculpture, ranging in size from an
almost 40-foot-wide bronze to palm-sized maquettes. Lots of
large, sinuous sculptures, for which Moore is best known, mingle
with examples of his family groupings, reclining female figures
and interlocking forms. They document how the artist sought to
strike a balance between figurative and abstract art, and between
the human body and nature.
"Girl," 1931. Ancaster stone from the collection of the Tate
Gallery, London.
The sheer diversity of Moore's sculptural work is dazzling. As
the exhibition's principal organizer, Dorothy Kosinski (curator
of European art at the Dallas Museum of Art) puts it, "There's
almost a ubiquitous quality to his work. You think you know him,
but then you'll see an array of shapes, forms, colors, moods that
you didn't know before."
Also featured prominently are nearly 100 drawings, from early
portraits to studies of Londoners during the Nazi blitz of World
War II. The quality of Moore's drawings will come as a revelation
to many American viewers. He was a superb draftsman.
"Henry Moore," which was organized with the collaboration of The
Henry Moore Foundation in England, which owns many of the works
on view, opened at the Dallas Museum of Art last February. It
traveled to the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San
Francisco, and will be seen at the National Gallery of Art
through January 27. Coordinator of the Washington installation is
Jeffrey Weiss, the National Gallery's curator of modern and
contemporary art. The exhibition catalogue is outstanding.
Moore was born in 1898 in Castleford, a rundown coal-mining town
in northern England, the seventh of eight children. His father, a
miner who became a pit manager, was a man of great intelligence
who helped his son in many ways.
Youthful excursions into the Yorkshire countryside exposed Henry
to stone outcroppings and slag heaps that he said "influenced
me...over wanting to do sculpture in the open air and to relate
my sculpture to landscape..." He was also impressed by medieval
stone carvings on local churches.
By age 11, having heard about the sculptor Michelangelo, Moore
resolved to become a sculptor himself. It was a daunting choice
for a youngster in the north of Britain on the brink of World War
I.
In his late teens Moore qualified as a teacher, but at 19 he
joined the army. While serving in the trenches in France he was
poisoned by mustard gas, a condition that plagued him for the
rest of his life. Demobilized in 1919, he returned to teaching
for a time, but soon used an ex-serviceman's scholarship to study
art at the Leeds School of Art.
His career really began in 1920 when he won a scholarship to the
Royal College of Art in London, whose traditional curriculum
emphasized the classical ideal as embodied in the college's
collection of Greco-Roman plaster casts. "British art was then in
a state of extreme degeneration," observes British-born John
Russell, one-time art critic of the New York Times, and an
academic training had little to offer."
Fortunately, London provided Moore with opportunities to pursue
his own progressive interests, notably so-called "primitive art."
He was particularly take with Mexican sculpture, which he
discovered in the British Museum. "Mexican art," Moore recalled,
"seemed to me true and right, perhaps because I at once hit on
the similarities in it with some 11th Century carvings I had seen
as a boy on Yorkshire churches."
He was also befriended and influenced by American expatriate
Jacob Epstein, a controversial sculptor, who showed Moore his
collection of Egyptian and tribal art. Moore soon tried his hand
at direct carving, embracing the precept of "truth to the
material." Direct carving remained a lifelong passion for him.
During an extended sojourn in Italy in 1925, Moore developed a
deep allegiance to the works of the great Italian masters of the
Renaissance. Throughout his career he sought to create sculpture
that was of its own time, yet has the qualities he admired in
Renaissance art. His affinity for Italian work found its more
direct outlet in his creations of the middle 1940s.
Frequent visits to Paris, starting in 1923, exposed Moore to
modern art movements and profoundly affected the course of his
own sculpture. He admired the work of Naum Gabo, Alberto
Giacometti and Piet Mondrian, and was highly impressed by the
paintings of Paul Cézanne. Cézanne became a lifelong inspiration
for Moore's reclining female figures.
By the late 1920s, he had married and begun to have gallery shows
of his avant-garde sculpture. Moore's "Reclining Woman" of 1927,
presenting a rounded, generalized figure in cast concrete,
reflected the influence of non-Western art on his early work. His
initial reclining sculptures are similar to a Mayan carved figure
of the rain spirit Chacmool that he had seen among the Mexican
art at the British Museum. "Girl" (1931) is another primitive
figure from this early period.
Moore became friends with Herbert Reed, the influential art
historian and critic, who championed his work for the rest of his
career. Read helped bring the young sculptor to public attention
and introduced him to kindred souls in Britain's modernist
movement.
As Steven A. Nash of the Fine Arts Museum in San Francisco puts
it in his perceptive catalogue essay, the 1930s represented
Moore's "most creatively experimental period." Building on his
affinity for primitive art and his attraction to the modernism of
Epstein and others, Moore "seemed suddenly to find new confidence
and the inspiration to push his art into realms not previously
explored."
Experiments in abstraction, radical anatomical distortions and an
innovative geometric vocabulary mark the work of this fecund,
daring phase of the sculptor's career. "Family" (1935), a 40-inch
tall elmwood piece, suggests the high degree of abstraction in
his work at this time.
Surrealism, the focus of Nash's chapter, became an important
element in Moore's 1930s output. "[T]he more aggressive approach
to form and metaphorical content that his interests in Surrealism
promoted left an important mark," Nash writes, citing Moore's
"Reclining Figure" (1939). This mysterious elmwood masterpiece,
punctuated with holes, hollows and curves, topped by a small,
carved-out head, suggests the sculptor's selective incorporation
of surrealist ideas into his work.
During one brief but intense time in the 1930s Moore combined
surrealist concepts and geometric elements in his sculpture.
Inspired by mathematical models he saw at London's Science
Museum, he crafted a series of 18 idiosyncratic stringed objects.
Mathematical models - designed to help engineers examine
potential structures for buildings, bridges and ships - gave
Moore new artistic freedom. As he later observed, he gained the
"ability to look through the strings as with a birdcage and see
one form within another."
Among the examples in the exhibition is "Stringed Figure" of
1937, a fascinating piece in which taut, harp-like strings
stretch across organic shapes made of cherry wood on an oak base.
It is on loan from the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
Moore's stringed sculptures, created over an 18-month period,
influenced the work of a number of artists, including Gabo and
Moore's great friend, Barbara Hepworth.
Preoccupied with the threat of his beloved England and hindered
by shortages of materials, Moore was unable to execute major
sculptural projects during the Second World War. Keenly aware of
the devastating effects of the war, particularly the constant
German air raids in 1940 on his countrymen, Moore began sketching
views of wartime London. Most notably he recorded people taking
refuge in the city's underground railway stations, capturing the
spirit of civilians enduring the vicissitudes of war.
"Tube Shelter Perspective" (1941), for example, a
pen-chalk-watercolor-gouache drawing, offers an elongated view of
a large number of reclining Londoners huddled together in a
subterranean station during the Nazi blitz. Each shelter, he
said, was "like a huge city in the bowels of the earth."
Moore's images of beleaguered Brits toughing it out against the
German onslaught were extremely popular with his countrymen.
Published in book form, they significantly boosted the artist's
reputation. These "Shelter Drawings" pack an evocative punch to
this day.
The enigmatic sketch, "Crown Looking at a Tied-Up Object" (1942)
is based on a photograph of a Nigerian tribal ceremony, according
to sculpture historian Alan Wilkinson in the catalogue.
In 1940, Moore's friend Kenneth Clark chose him to be an official
war artist, and commissioned him to record activities at the
mining pit in Castleford where Moore's father once worked. His
dark, sketchy drawings showed miners at work in dark, dank,
claustrophobic conditions that he considered worse than "Dante's
Hell." A far cry from his family-oriented three-dimensional work,
these superb works on paper are an unexpected highlight of the
show.
After his studio in Hampstead was bombed in 1941, Moore moved
north of London to the small village of Much Hadham. The rural
setting offered more space for work and outdoor displays and,
after the war, helped relax the driven artist somewhat. His work
softened, suggesting an increasing interest in human
relationships and man's connections to the natural environment.
After the birth of his only child, Mary, in 1946, he began a
series of works on the theme of family life. "Family Group"
(1948-49), a highly expressive, green-bronze depiction of a
mother and father holding their infant between them, is a
highlight of the show.
A major retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in 1946
augmented Moore's worldwide standing. His wholesome and universal
imagery, suggesting a spiritual rebirth following the carnage and
destruction of the war, struck responsive chords everywhere.
Several works created in the wake of the war explored darker
themes. In "Warrior with Shield" (1953-54), a scary-looking
figure with a Picasso-like, gashed head and missing one arm, a
leg and the foot of his remaining leg, recoils in horror behind
his raised shield. This strange, even bizarre image presumably
reflects the sculptor's anguish with the destructiveness of World
War II.
Moore's continuing interest in primitive art manifested itself
strongly in some postwar pieces. For instance, he created a
series of internal/external forms that were apparently inspired
by Oceanic tribal styles, specifically Malanggan carvings from
New Ireland that he had seen at the British Museum. The sinuous
plaster "Working Model for Upright Internal/External Form"
(1951), is an example of this fascinating, complex motif.
By the late 1940s Moore's work was being promoted abroad by the
British Council as proof of England's artistic genius, and as
offering reassuring themes and earthbound figures that spoke a
common language to people the world over. His international
celebrity, confirmed by an appearance on the cover of Time
magazine in the 1960s, and numerous honors and awards, abetted
his interest in creating large works for public appreciation.
With success came the ability and means to hire assistants, to
work on a larger scale, and to realize his lifelong dream of
placing massive sculpture outdoors near his rural studio.
Size became an increasingly important element in Moore's work.
"Most everything I do," he said, "I intend to make on a large
scale...Scale itself has its own impact, and physically we can
relate ourselves more strongly to a big sculpture than a small
one."
In 1955 Moore was selected to create a major sculpture for the
headquarters of UNESCO in Paris. Carved from white travertine
marble, it was the first of many international commissions that
today can be found in such countries as Argentina, Brazil, Japan,
Mexico and Venezuela, as well as England and the United States.
Among the most familiar are sizeable works outside the Houses of
Parliament in London, at Lincoln Center in New York, and adjacent
to the Dallas City Hall. For a time Henry Moore was the
sculptor for important pieces in major public places.
Shifting his focus from direct carving, by means of which he had
shaped many of his earlier pieces, Moore worked increasingly in
bronze, a durable metal ideally suited for outdoor sculpture.
Bronze was also a resilient material for the hollows and voids he
incorporated into many major works.,
Several galleries filled with intriguing, expansive, reclining
figures toward the end of the exhibition underscore the power of
Moore's late, monumental pieces. They include "Reclining Figure:
Festival" (1951), "Reclining Figure" (1959-64), and "Reclining
Mother and Child" (1975-76). Each is a show-stopper.
Moore's massive "Knife Edge Mirror Two Piece" (1976-78), created
and sited in consultation with I. M. Pei, architect of the
National Gallery's East Building, greets visitors as they prepare
to enter the museum today. Also at the gallery entrance is the
ominous bronze, "Goslar Warrior" (1973-74), another memorable
work.
A complex and charismatic figure, eloquent and appealing, Moore
had a significant influence on sculpture in general and British
art in particular. His unusual, innovative oeuvre inspired
sculptors everywhere, and his achievements gave heart to younger
generations of British artists.
Toward the end of this career, Moore's fame, the extreme
popularity of his work and the public visibility of his
monumental pieces led to overexposure--and to a diminution of his
reputation. In becoming "too popular," he lost favor with the art
establishment and was attacked for being too "conservative" and
insufficiently "contemporary."
"Stringed Figure," 1937. Cherry wood and string on oak base
from the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture
Garden, Washington, D.C.
In recent years, however, a spate of exhibitions and critical
reassessments of his oeuvre, including this splendid show and
catalogue, have spotlighted the magnitude of his
achievements--and reconfirmed his seminal role in the evolution
of modern sculpture.
By all accounts, Moore was a complex man who combined modesty
with the kind of large ego necessary to undertake daring work.
This rewarding exhibition confirms his unique, epochal
contributions to world art.
It underscores, for example, how Moore's explorations of the
possibilities of abstraction and figuration in sculpture led to a
formal language that celebrated the human form at a time when
realism was considered dated. His postwar public art, in which he
grappled with issues of monumentality and scale, changed
perceptions about artwork in public places.
Henry Moore's expert use of materials, his pioneering experiments
in form and space, and his commitment to the importance of the
human figure have earned him a place in the front ranks of modern
sculptors. This comprehensive exhibition measures up to the
magnificence of his achievements.
"Henry Moore" is accompanied by a comprehensive, fully
illustrated, scholarly catalogue, entitled, Henry Moore:
Sculpting the 20th Century. Edited by the exhibition's lead
organizer, Dorothy Kosinski of the Dallas Museum of Art, it
includes essays by Nash. Deputy director and chief curator at the
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and other Moore scholars.
The book places great stress on the contradiction between Moore's
popularity and accomplishments and the harsh criticism of his
work in recent decades. It offers ample coverage of his early
sculpture, much of it unfamiliar to the general public, and all
facets of his later work. The detailed, illustrated chronology is
especially well done and useful.
The photography is spectacular, with images of over 200 works,
some taken by Moore himself, including bronzes, carvings,
maquettes, plasters and drawings. Many have never been published
before.
This is an extraordinarily handsome and informative volume that
will be treasured by Henry Moore fans and all interested in the
history of modern sculpture. Co-published by the Dallas Museum
and Yale University Press, the 320-page tome may be purchased for
$50 (hardcover).
The National Gallery of Art is on the National Mall between
Third and Ninth Streets at Constitution Avenue in Washington. For
information, 202-737-4215.