HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
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HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
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Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… 显示更多 PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT AMERICAN COLLECTION
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)

Rocking Chair No. 4: Miniature

细节
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
Rocking Chair No. 4: Miniature
bronze with dark brown and green patina
Height: 6 1/8 in. (15.6 cm.)
Conceived in 1950 and cast in an edition of nine, plus one artist's proof
来源
Private collection, Canada.
Osborne Samuel, London, by whom acquired from the above in March 2015; sale, Sotheby's, London, 19 June 2018, lot 6.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
出版
I. Jianou, Henry Moore, Paris, 1968, no. 261, p. 76.
D. Mitchinson, ed., Henry Moore with comments by the artist, London, 1981, no. 200, p. 105 (another cast illustrated).
W. S. Lieberman, Henry Moore, 60 Years of His Art, New York & London, 1983, p. 123 (another cast illustrated p. 80).
A. Bowness, ed., Henry Moore, Complete Sculpture, vol. 2, Sculpture 1949-54, London, 1986, no. 277 (another cast illustrated, pl. 17).
J. Hedgecoe, Henry Moore: A Monumental Vision, Cologne, 2005, no. 263, p. 212 (another cast illustrated p. 213).
展览
London, Osborne Samuel, Henry Moore, May - June 2015, p. 62 (illustrated p. 63).
注意事项
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent. This lot has been imported from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

荣誉呈献

Annie Wallington
Annie Wallington Head of Core Sales

拍品专文

Moore’s rocking chairs uniquely combine the intimate depiction of the mother and child, with the artist's mastery in shaping form. ‘These were done to amuse my daughter when she was a child’, he commented in conversation with Wolfgang Fischer in 1971. ‘To have made them even half-life size – that is, three feet high – would have been wrong. They would have lost their toy-like quality’ (H. Moore, quoted in A. Wilkinson, ed., Henry Moore: Writings and Conversations, Berkeley, 2002, p. 210). These sculptures are Moore's only kinetic works – it is virtually impossible not to want to handle and rock them. ‘I discovered while doing them’, Moore recalled, ‘that the speed of the rocking chair depended on the curvature of the base and the disposition of the weights and balances of the sculpture, so each of them rocks at a different speed’ (H. Moore, quoted in J. Hedgecoe & H. Moore, op. cit., p. 178).
Moore's daughter Mary was born in 1946, the year after he completed the small terracotta family groups. Henry and Irina Moore had been married for sixteen years when she arrived; the sculptor was forty-seven, his wife was thirty-nine, and her previous pregnancies had resulted in miscarriages. Mary remained their only child. ‘She was in every sense a precious baby’, Roger Berthoud has written. ‘Henry was from the first an active and doting father, and played a full part in helping to look after his beloved daughter’ (R. Berthoud, The Life of Henry Moore, New York, 1987, p. 197). Mary was four when Moore created the Rocking Chairs for her, older than the child in the sculptures – while modeling them, Moore was happily reminiscing about his little girl when she was learning to walk.
The first three Rocking Chairs are each about 12 inches high, this, the fourth, subtitled Miniature (based on No. 3), is just under half the size of the others. This format is certainly the most appealing of the group, from both an emotional and a formal point-of-view. Here the joyousness of the pair is apparent in the flailing excited legs of the infant and the open-mouthed profile of the mother. In comparison to works such as the iconic Reclining Figure Festival, where the figure appears to cry to the sky with distress, in a similar fashion to the mother and child depicted in Picasso’s Guernica, the open mouth format in Rocking Chair No. 4: Miniature is laughing and jubilant.
Grohmann reiterated: ‘[The Rocking Chairs] are enchanting impromptus, the offspring of a lighter muse. One is inclined to suppose that family life underwent a happy release of tension through his young daughter Mary, forgetting that at the same period the frightful 'Helmet' series came into being ... As with Mozart, tragedy is next door to comedy ... jubilation is all the more genuine when behind it stands the totality of life with all its unresolved conflicts’ (W. Grohmann, The Art of Henry Moore, London, 1960, pp. 142-143).

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