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Lot 311
  • 311

Henry Moore, O.M., C.H.

Estimate
180,000 - 250,000 USD
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Description

  • Henry Moore OM, CH
  • SEATED FIGURE ON SQUARE STEPS
  • Bronze, brown patina

  • Length: 9¼ in.
  • 23.5 cm

Provenance

Margretta Austin Jamison (acquired from the artist circa 1960
Thence by descent to the present owner

Literature

Alan Bowness, ed., Henry Moore Complete Sculpture, 1955-1964, v꧋ol. 3, Londoജn, 1986, no. 436, illustration of another cast p. 37

Catalogue Note

Throughout the 1950s Henry Moore worked voraciously, conceiving several of his most iconic works including the celebrated sculpture King and Queen (1952). Alhough his production was prolific, Moo♏re’s imagination and creative stamina was exemplary, as the quality of the present work testifies.

Seated Figure on Square Steps is an outstanding example of Moore’s work of the 1950s, a decade in which he challenges the idea of space through various means. In tꦫhis case the redevelopment of the base is a key part of his thinking. The figure sits, semi-upright and curved in form, dramatically juxtaposed against the stairs beneath her. Moore is using the steps as a way to organize space - an even, structured form that works as a wonderful development of the standard plinth.

Moore worked on a 🙈number of enormous projects in the 1950s and naturally they all involve a characteristic monumentality. Works including the massive Unesco commission in Paris and the brick relief on the Bouwcentrum in Rotterdam are testament to a sculptor gaining a formidable reputation and executing ideas unburdened by monetary restriction. Indeed the present work is one of 11 maquettes for the Unesco commission which was a formidable test even for sculptor of Moore’s skill.

‘The commission to make a work for the Unesco headquarters in Paris occupied Moore for over four years, during which time he filled notebooks with sketches and ideas as well as completing eleven maquettes on the subject. This led to his biographer, Roger Berthoud, dubbing the group “the daughters of Unesco” (D. Mitchinson, Celebrating Moore, London, 1998, no. 181, p. 253).