Henry Moore (1898-1986)
Henry Moore (1898-1986)

Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps

Details
Henry Moore (1898-1986)
Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps
bronze with green patina
25 1/2in. (65cm.) high
Conceived and cast in 1956 in an edition of nine plus one artist's copy
Provenance
The Leicester Galleries, London (1957)
Sir Colin Anderson, London and thence by descent to the present owner
Literature
Exh. cat., Smithsonian Institute, Washington D.C., Sculptures and Drawings by Henry Moore 1966-68, no. 13 (another cast illustrated).
H. Read, Henry Moore, Sculpture & Drawings, vol. 3, London 1965, p. 25, no. 427 (another cast illustrated pl. 61).
R. Melville, Henry Moore, Sculpture and Drawings 1921-1969, London 1972, nos. 516-7 (other casts illustrated).
Exh. cat., Forte di Belvedere, Henry Moore, Florence 1972, no. 97 (another cast illustrated p. 169).
ed. A. Bowness, Henry Moore Complete Sculpture 1955-64, London 1985, vol. 3, no. 427, p. 34 and pl. 57 (another cast illustrated).
Exh. cat., Stdtisches Kunsthalle, Mannheim, Henry Moore Ursprung und Vollendung, 1996, no. 72 (another cast illustrated in colour p. 137).

Lot Essay

Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps is the first of a series of works executed by Moore in the mid-1950s that deal with the theme of the seated figure in an architectural environment. Along with a number of sculptures of seated women set alone or in a group against a wall or, as in this work, seated atop a number of steps, this work is part of an planned exploration on a theme that Moore executed in preparation for an important commissioned sculpture for the UNESCO building in Paris.

Although Moore had on occasion depicted the seated figure before, it only emerged as a continuous theme in his work in 1955. Moore's first idea for the UNESCO commission had been a seated figure lost in contemplation while reading a book, but this was soon rejected in favour of figures set against or in conjuction with a building as the resultant UNESCO piece would itself have to be. It was while working on these ideas that the theme of the seated woman on the steps emerged in his work. The seated figure, as opposed to the standing or reclining form represented a new challenge that Moore found was more open to the possibility of expressing psychological content. Excited by the possibilities that the seated form offered, Moore found that through this more enclosed and self-contained pose he could express the particular qualities specific to a certain mood or atmosphere in a way that had been denied him in his earlier figures. Although these newly developed ideas were ultimately rejected by Moore for the UNESCO commission on account of them being too specific, in a few works they were developed into full-scale sculptures in their own right. The present work is the first of these.

In addition to the seated form the other new departure represented by Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps is Moore's use of the drapery to define the contours of the human form. "Drapery", Moore said, "can emphasize the tension in a figure, for where the form pushes outwards, such as on the shoulders, the thighs, the breasts, etc. (it can be pulled tight across the form, almost like a bandage), and by contrast with the crumpled slackness of the drapery which lies between the salient points, the pressure from inside is intensified. Also in my mind was to connect the contrast of the sizes of folds, here small, fine and delicate, in other places big and heavy, with the form of mountains, which are the crinkled skin of the earth. (The analogy, I think, comes out in close-up photographs taken of the drapery alone.)" (cited in John Russell, Henry Moore, London 1968, p. 132.)

In attempting to echo the "crinkled skin of the earth" in his use of drapery, Moore's aims reflect many of his contemporaries' preoccupations with materia as well as his own ongoing portrayal of woman as an archetypal "Earth Mother". Moore began to use the drapery in his sculpture after having explored the draped form so powerfully in his famous "shelter" drawings made in the London Underground during the Second World War. After his first visit to Greece in 1951, where he came across the classical use of the draped figure, it appeared more frequently in his work, receiving its fullest expression in this sculpture and its two sister works, Draped Seated Woman of 1957-8 and Draped Reclining Woman of 1957-8.

"I found that using drapery in sculpture was a most enjoyable exercise in itself," Moore once observed, and in the working model for Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps it is possible to see that the precise nature of the drapery in this sculpture was of partcular concern to Moore, who used crumpled sheets of newpaper embedded in the plaster in order to achieve the exact effect he desired. This effect, somewhat akin to plowed earth, not only deliberately refers to the earth, but also echoes the progression of the steps onto which the figure is placed. This gives the composition of the sculpture a unity and counterbalance that alongside this particular cast's magnificent green patina lends the work a pervasive sense of luminosity and rhythm that endows the whole work with a unique and profoundly organic surface.

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