
Getty Museum
Seated Woman
Creator
Henry MooreBritish Photographer · 1898–1986
All works by this person →> Sculpture is an art of the open air. Daylight, sunlight, is necessary to it, and for me its best setting and compliment is nature. I would rather have a piece of my sculpture put in a landscape, almost any landscape, than in or on the most beautiful building I know. > > --Henry Moore Henry Moore's sculptures are archetypal forms suggesting elemental or indefinable truths about being and nature.
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- designed 1958–1959; cast 1975
- Medium
- Bronze
- Culture
- British
- Department
- Sculpture
- Institution
- Getty Museum
Although willfully distorted, this large bronze form remains instantly identifiable as a seated woman. The figure's lower half has been reduced to a bulbous mass that rests atop a minimally articulated stool. The top half is more contorted, yet plainly recognizable as a female torso. The woman's head turns distractedly to one side and, though lacking in anatomical specificity, achieves a surprising degree of expression. The creation of this sculpture reveals the lengthy gestation period that sometimes accompanied Henry Moore's work. In the late 1950s, he made a *maquette* or small plaster model of this seated figure. Once he had achieved the desired shape, one of Moore's studio assistants then carved a plaster mold of the *maquette* to be sent to a foundry for casting in bronze. But Moore, unsatisfied with the large mold, chose not to have it cast and continued to refine the plaster. It remained in his studio for many years and was finally cast in 1975--more than two decades after the original design was conceived.
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