David Mitchinson, Editor
Celebrating Moore
Works from the Collection of The Henry Moore Foundation
360 pages, 10-1/2 x 12 inches, 290 color illustrations.
September 1998, Only available in Only available in the United States, Canada
Categories: Art
September 1998, Only available in Only available in the United States, Canada
Categories: Art
This book is a celebration of The Henry Moore Foundation's collection—the most important and comprehensive single group of Moore's drawings, graphics, and sculpture.
More than 300 of Moore's acclaimed works are reproduced in full color, and extensive captions are provided by distinguished sculptors, art critics, and art historians, many of whom knew and worked with Moore. Their fresh insights and personal anecdotes provide a detailed and compelling analysis of Moore's artistry.
David Mitchinson's introductory essay traces the formation of The Henry Moore Foundation's collection, a fascinating story that has never been told before. He explains Moore's somewhat haphazard way of working, the confused ownership between the Foundation and its trading company, the strengths and weaknesses of the Collection itself, and the evolution of the Foundation's property at Perry Green in Hertfordshire. With a foreword by Sir Alan Bowness, Celebrating Moore will be a welcome addition to the study and appreciation of Henry Moore for years to come.
From the Foreword:"Henry Moore talked well and liked talking about sculpture, but he rarely gave any verbal explanation of his own works. That was for others to do: He was the man who had made the piece and put it out in the world. This is the form that the catalogue takes—twenty-five sculptors, art historians, critics, curators, and film makers write about sculptures and drawings that particularly interest them."
More than 300 of Moore's acclaimed works are reproduced in full color, and extensive captions are provided by distinguished sculptors, art critics, and art historians, many of whom knew and worked with Moore. Their fresh insights and personal anecdotes provide a detailed and compelling analysis of Moore's artistry.
David Mitchinson's introductory essay traces the formation of The Henry Moore Foundation's collection, a fascinating story that has never been told before. He explains Moore's somewhat haphazard way of working, the confused ownership between the Foundation and its trading company, the strengths and weaknesses of the Collection itself, and the evolution of the Foundation's property at Perry Green in Hertfordshire. With a foreword by Sir Alan Bowness, Celebrating Moore will be a welcome addition to the study and appreciation of Henry Moore for years to come.
From the Foreword:"Henry Moore talked well and liked talking about sculpture, but he rarely gave any verbal explanation of his own works. That was for others to do: He was the man who had made the piece and put it out in the world. This is the form that the catalogue takes—twenty-five sculptors, art historians, critics, curators, and film makers write about sculptures and drawings that particularly interest them."
CONTRIBUTORS:
Julian Andrews
Roger Berthoud
Giovanni Carandente Frances Carey
Anthony Caro
David Cohen
Susan Compton
Richard Cork
Penelope Curtis
Deborah Emont-Scott
Anita Feldman Bennet
Terry Friedman
Gail Gelburd
Clare Hillman
Phillip King
Christa Lichtenstern
Norbert Lynton
Bernard Meadows
Peter Murray
William Packer
John Read
Reinhard Rudolph
Julian Stallabrass
Julie Summers
Alan Wilkinson
Julian Andrews
Roger Berthoud
Giovanni Carandente Frances Carey
Anthony Caro
David Cohen
Susan Compton
Richard Cork
Penelope Curtis
Deborah Emont-Scott
Anita Feldman Bennet
Terry Friedman
Gail Gelburd
Clare Hillman
Phillip King
Christa Lichtenstern
Norbert Lynton
Bernard Meadows
Peter Murray
William Packer
John Read
Reinhard Rudolph
Julian Stallabrass
Julie Summers
Alan Wilkinson
Henry Moore: Writings and Conversations, by Henry Moore
Mark di Suvero: Dreambook, by Mark di Suvero
The Sculpture of Ruth Asawa: Contours in the Air, edited by Daniell Cornell
Isamu Noguchi and Modern Japanese Ceramics: A Close Embrace of the Earth, by Louise Allison Cort and Bert Winther-Tamaki
Mark di Suvero: Dreambook, by Mark di Suvero
The Sculpture of Ruth Asawa: Contours in the Air, edited by Daniell Cornell
Isamu Noguchi and Modern Japanese Ceramics: A Close Embrace of the Earth, by Louise Allison Cort and Bert Winther-Tamaki












