Closes soon: Henry Moore: Plasters
Perry Green Exhibition
1st April 2011 - 30th October 2011
Sheep Field Barn Gallery
Henry Moore Foundation
Perry Green
Herts SG10 6EE


Henry Moore: Plasters
Sheep Field Barn Gallery

Three Way Piece No.1: Points 1964-65
LH 533
plaster with surface colour, hessian on wood support
height 193cm
Gift of the artist 1977
photo: Jennifer Hicks

Three-Quarter Figure: Lines 1980
LH 797
plaster
31 x 22.5 x 84cm
The Henry Moore Foundation
photo: The Henry Moore Foundation archive
Reclining Figure: Angles 1979
LH 675
plaster with surface colour
length 220cm
Gift of the artist 1977
photo: The Henry Moore Foundation archive
Working Model for Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps 1956
LH 427
painted plaster, paper and hessian on metal support
height 65cm
Gift of the artist 1977
photo: The Henry Moore Foundation archive
Working Model for Sheep Piece 1971
LH 626
plaster
length 142cm
Gift of the artist 1977
photo: The Henry Moore Foundation archive
Henry Moore: Plasters runs at Perry Green until 30 October in the Sheep Field Barn Gallery.
Until recently, plasters made by sculptors have been seen as a means to an end, rather than as works in their own right. This is the first exhibition to show the way in which that perception is changing. Curated by Anita Feldman, Head of Collections and Exhibitions, Henry Moore: Plasters has been in preparation for four years, allowing Foundation conservators the opportunity to restore plaster originals for some of Moore's most iconic works. This selection spans three decades, with many sculptures being displayed for the first time in the UK, a stone's throw from the studios in which they were made.
These studios, including the Bourne Maquette Studio, which is at the heart of the creative process, are also open to visitors. They offer a fuller understanding not only of Moore's working methods, but in particular of the role of plaster as a medium for sculpture. As well as enabling Moore to experiment freely with form and scale, plaster allowed the artist to work directly with found objects and incorporate them physically into his work at the maquette stage. It also had the advantage of being able to be both modelled and carved; once set, it could be chiselled and chipped away at like stone or wood.
Initially many plasters were destroyed to prevent further casts being made once a bronze edition was complete. Over time, however, Moore increasingly retained his plasters, appreciating them as the original sculptures which he hand-coloured and textured. Significantly, the markings made by the artist are much more visible in the plaster than the bronze, giving the sculptures a more organic and sometimes even a scarred appearance. A number of sculptural ideas were only conceived in plaster and Moore's plasters, which are much less well-known, are not included in the catalogue raisonné of his sculptures. Very few plasters can be found outside the Foundation, with notable exceptions a substantial gift the artist made to the Art Gallery of Ontario in 1973 as well as works at Tate and on loan to the Dallas Museum of Art.
The exhibition is accompanied by a major new book, co-published by the Royal Academy of Arts, Henry Moore: Plasters, with essays by Anita Feldman and Malcolm Woodward, who worked alongside Moore in the enlargement of the plasters. Other contributors to the book include Assistant Curator Claire Smith, and former assistants to Moore Anthony Caro, Derek Howarth and Phillip King. Priced £30, it is available at Perry Green, online and in good art bookshops.
Entry included in ticket to The Henry Moore Foundation, open Tuesday to Sunday and Bank Holiday Mondays, 1 April - 30 October 2011. Groups welcome, call 01279 844 104.