Henry Moore (1898-1986)
羅納德.P.斯坦頓遺產珍藏
亨利.摩爾 (1898-1986)

家庭群像

細節
亨利.摩爾 (1898-1986)
家庭群像
銅雕 深褐色銅銹
高 5 3/4 吋 (14.7 公分)
1945年構思;1946年鑄
來源
私人收藏 (1946年購自藝術家本人)
倫敦馬約畫廊
倫敦沃丁頓畫廊
美國私人收藏
紐約米切爾.英尼斯及納什畫廊
已故藏家於2004年2月17日購自上述收藏
出版
W. Grohmann著 《The Art of Henry Moore》,倫敦,1960年,第142頁 (赤陶版本插圖,圖號121)
J. Hedgecoe編 《Henry Moore》,紐約,1968年,第162頁(赤陶版本插圖)
I. Jianou著 《Henry Moore》,巴黎,1968年,第74頁,編號222
R. Melville著 《Henry Moore, Sculpture and Drawings, 1921-1969》,倫敦,1970年,編號343 (赤陶版本插圖)
G.C. Argan著 《Henry Moore》,紐約,1971年,編號81 (另一鑄版插圖)
D. Sylvester編 《Henry Moore, Complete Sculpture 1921-48》,第1冊,倫敦,1988年,第14頁,編號235 (大型版本插圖,第150頁)
展覽
1946年10月 倫敦萊斯特畫廊 「Living Irish Art: New Sculpture and Drawings by Henry Moore」展覽;第11頁,編號5 (作品名稱《The Family》)
1957年 巴黎貝格胡安畫廊 「Henry Moore: sculptures et dessins」展覽 (插圖)
1972年11月至12月 倫敦勒菲弗畫廊 「Small Bronzes and Drawings by Henry Moore」展覽;第28頁,編號11 (插圖,第29頁)
1978年 紐約托馬斯.吉布森畫廊 「80/80」展覽;第17頁 (插圖)

榮譽呈獻

Jessica Fertig
Jessica Fertig

拍品專文

The Family Groups are Moore’s most socially-minded sculptures, and for this reason have become for many people the introduction to this sculptor’s art and his most beloved signature works. He conceived this theme for a public commission related to the building of new towns and schools in Britain before the Second World War. It was not until 1944, however, during the height of the war, that it appeared funding for the commission might finally become available. Moore modeled in terracotta the initial series of eight Family Groups. The end of the war in Europe, in May 1945, prompted Moore to create six more models, and in 1947 he enlarged three of these terracottas, including the one pertaining to the present sculpture, to produce the first bronze editions.
Moore intended that the Family Group sculptures celebrate the nation’s return to the peacetime well-being and the pleasures of family life. They project a renewed emphasis on fundamental humanist values, while providing an aesthetic model for community spirit and co-operation, with the promise of progressive social services for all. These sculptures rejoice not only in the birth of a child—Moore’s daughter Mary, his only child, was born in 1946—but in the creation of new young families as well. After a half-decade of wartime casualties and a low birth rate, to once again become fruitful and multiply was a crucial requirement for the economic and social revival of Britain during the post-war era.
Moore eventually opted for the iconic simplicity of a triadic configuration when he chose to enlarge two of his three-figure family maquettes to life-size for installation at schools in Stevenage (1947; Lund Humphries, no. 269) and Harlow (1955, no. 365). The four-figure groups, however, outnumber the three-member families almost two to one among the terracotta models. The combination of both parents plus two children, one of each sex, was capable of generating more varied arrangements and a wider range of emotional expression.
"This Family Group [the present sculpture] is rather far removed from the others in its formal aspects,” Will Grohmann wrote. “The man's chest is an open hollow; the woman's right breast is negatively modeled, the left positively; the legs are as rigid as the string-boards of a church pew. The boy standing between his father's knees is statuesquely simplified, the child sitting on his mother's lap is reaching with his left hand for her open breast, but the hand is lost in the bulk of the mother's body. The expression of the group is archaic, mute; the human relationship between the four beings is expressed only through the convergent attitude of the figures and through the alternations of solid shapes and hollows. The woman's hollow is fruitfulness, the man's is spirit” (op. cit., 1960, p. 142).

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