Moore, Henry: Seated Woman in Armchair – SOLD

£1,750.00

A sublime limited edition lithograph numbered 11 of 75, one of his most beautiful works, framed.

More images can be provided on request.


Artist: Henry Moore, (1898-1986)


Title and date: Seated Woman in Armchair, 1973-74, signed


Size: 18.1 x 15.9 cm on a sheet of handmade paper 68.6 x 49.5 cms.


Out of stock

Description

Artist description:

Henry Moore was born into a large family in Castleford, a small mining town in Yorkshire, England. While still at school he began to carve wood and model clay and decided that he wanted to be a sculptor. His father however, thought that teaching would be a more practical option, so rather than going to the local art college, Moore trained as a teacher and began teaching at his old school.

In 1916, when he was 18, Henry Moore joined the army and he travelled to France with his regiment where they fought in the battle of Cambrai. Moore was sent home after suffering from the effects of a gas attack. Once he had recovered he went back to teaching but soon realised that it wasn’t for him and instead began studying at Leeds School of Art. In 1921 he won a scholarship to study sculpture at the Royal Academy of Art in London where he became particularly interested in Mexican, Egyptian and African sculptures at the British Museum. After graduating, Henry Moore stayed in London and joined other artists experimenting with ideas and styles. In the 1930s, he joined an artist group called Unit One, which included Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Paul Nash. He was also a member of the British Surrealist movement, and took part in the International Surrealist Exhibition in London in 1936.

During the Second World War, Moore was asked by the War Artists’ Advisory Committee to document life on the home front. He drew people sheltering in bomb shelters in London underground stations and these drawings, along with those he made later in coal mines, are considered among his greatest achievements.

Henry Moore won the International Prize for Sculpture at the Venice Biennale of 1948, and from then onwards, he remained in huge demand. His distinctive sculptures can still be seen in parks and squares in cities all over the world.