HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
6 更多
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
9 更多
PROPERTY FROM AN AMERICAN ESTATE
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)

Family Group

细节
HENRY MOORE (1898-1986)
Family Group
signed and numbered 'Moore 1/9' (on the back of the base)
bronze with brown and green patina
Height: 6 in. (15.2 cm.)
Conceived in 1945; this bronze version cast in 1969
来源
Dorsky Galleries Ltd., New York (acquired from the artist).
Acquired from the above by the late owner, October 1979.
出版
D. Sylvester, ed., Henry Moore: Complete Sculpture, 1921-1948, London, 1957, vol. I, p. 15, no. 237 (terracotta version).

拍品专文

The present work belongs to a series of maquettes which Moore produced for Family Group, 1949, a life-size sculpture commissioned for the Barclay Secondary School, Stevenage New Town, Hertfordshire. This theme of the family unit had first materialized in Moore's work when the artist was asked by Henry Morris and Walter Gropius to create a sculpture for a village college at Impington near Cambridge. The college's ideal of both child and adult education in a single institution appealed to Moore, who had originally trained as a school teacher himself and for whom the theme of the "Mother and Child" had been something of an obsession throughout his oeuvre. The occasion of a commission for a public sculpture, this time on behalf of an educational institution, encouraged the sculptor to consider the importance of the family, whose close interpersonal relationships provided an exemplary guide for wider communal values. The Impington sculpture, which had been under discussion as early as 1934, was never completed for this site because of funding problems, but Moore continued to work obsessively on numerous related drawings and maquettes from 1944 to 1947, when he was approached to create a work for Barclay Secondary School.
The present maquette was conceived in 1945, by which time the family group had become a poignant reflection of the artist's wish for peace and harmony in a world shattered by war. The war had of course greatly disrupted family ties not only through wounding and death, but through conscription and mass evacuation and Moore's preoccupation with the link between parent and child (the "community of life" as he termed it), can be seen as a manifestation of the common anxiety to reassert traditional home life at this time. Moreover, as Susan Compton noted, "it consolidates his move towards a wider and more humanist approach appropriate for public sculpture" (Henry Moore, London, 1988, exh. cat., p. 224).

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