Henry Moore U.K., 1898-1986
Sculptures: Dark Interior, 1973
Original lithograph on wove paper
Signed by the artist in pencil, lower right on recto
Signed by the artist in pencil, lower right on recto
43 x 52 cm
© The Estate of Henry Moore
Further images
'My drawings are done mainly as a help towards making sculpture…as a way of sorting out ideas and developing them' Henry Moore Henry Moore used drawing to work out how...
"My drawings are done mainly as a help towards making sculpture…as a way of sorting out ideas and developing them"
Henry Moore
Henry Moore used drawing to work out how to transform the shapes of objects that inspired him into the strange and beautiful shapes for his sculptures. The sculptures are quite complicated, but by using drawing he could work out his ideas and how he could make the sculptures work, before actually creating them. Creating impressions of movement and radiance and carving human forms from a sheet of paper in a similar fashion to the way in which he carved expressive forms from slabs of stone. With these works on paper, Moore was not drawing simply as an exercise. Instead, the artist was drawing for ‘the pleasure of looking more intently and intensely’, emphasising that these works on paper are not simply sketches, but instead illustrate important stages in Moore’s development as a draughtsman and sculptor.
Henry Moore
Henry Moore used drawing to work out how to transform the shapes of objects that inspired him into the strange and beautiful shapes for his sculptures. The sculptures are quite complicated, but by using drawing he could work out his ideas and how he could make the sculptures work, before actually creating them. Creating impressions of movement and radiance and carving human forms from a sheet of paper in a similar fashion to the way in which he carved expressive forms from slabs of stone. With these works on paper, Moore was not drawing simply as an exercise. Instead, the artist was drawing for ‘the pleasure of looking more intently and intensely’, emphasising that these works on paper are not simply sketches, but instead illustrate important stages in Moore’s development as a draughtsman and sculptor.