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Wednesday, May 09, 2007

HENRY MOORE: RE-VISIONARY ARTIST

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I've been thinking a lot about the artistic vision of Henry Moore. So I revisited a short essay that I wrote awhile ago and made a few "refinements" trying to get the words and images to journey together. For me Moore was the greatest sculptor of the 20th Century, presenting a totally radical re-vision, a deeper re-cognition between matter and awareness. I'll try to explain why I feel that way.

In 2005 I was very fortunate to see the Henry Moore Retrospective Exhibition which traveled from England to Brazil for showings in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Brasília. This was the first time that Moore’s works had been shown in Latin America. I visited the exhibition only briefly in Rio which whetted my appetite. When it arrived in Brasília I was drawn to it as a child is drawn to a candy store. I think that I went to it four times but even that was hardly enough.

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Immersing my awareness in the works of a great artist like Moore was a powerful experience. Almost immediately, the way that I perceived the world began to change. It’s not easy to express exactly how it changed but my attention shifted. I began to see objects not as isolated entities but as embedded in larger environments – the inside and outside and surroundings of the subject became more apparent and as important as the piece of art.

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I understood that the final perceived vision is an interaction, a dynamic and participatory dance of form and space. Moore demolished the hierarchical, elitist and monumental vision of art as somehow above, beyond and separate from the viewer. He re-visioned the sculpture, the viewer and environment as part of a participatory world.

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In one of the statements by Moore which was displayed on the exhibit walls he says that he learned that sculpture was not simply a manipulation of the material form but also a shaping of the space around it. He wanted his large pieces to be displayed in nature where they could interact with the surrounding space – as a form, as a window, as a reflection, as occupied and unoccupied space.

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I thought of the profound Buddhist insight that is the opening of the Heart Sutra: Form is Emptiness. Emptiness is none other than Form. Moore’s sculptures are, of course, solid objects but the presentation of the work is a performance, an interaction with the environment and a living testament to the truth of this Buddhist insight about impermanence. Each location, each perspective, each eye presents something new. Form, emptiness and constant change. Somehow, it seems more like a conversation than a permanence.

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Moore said that he considered art to be his spirituality which I take to mean that the work and the practice of the artist are to discover truth, reveal vision and create beauty.

There is a very poignant moment in the documentary film about his life where Moore recalls the series paintings that he was commissioned to do about the WWII bombing of London. He said that when air raid sirens would start that he would feel a “strange exhilaration.” In the Tubes which served as the bomb shelters he joined the masses of people huddled and stretched out for the night. Moore -- who is arguably the master of the reclining figure -- said, “I had never seen nor imagined so many reclining figures.” Those paintings -- primarily scenes from the bomb shelters -- are hauntingly beautiful portrayals of people nested safely underground.

The theme of being safely held is powerfully presented in his sculptures

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Even with his fallen warrior, the return to the ground, rather than a conquering of it, feels more like a nurturing than a defeat.

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I understand Moore’s work,
above all, as a "monumental" return to humility. I don’t mean the stylized humility of manners and social forms. I mean “humility” as in the Greek root word -- humus. Moore took artistic beauty off the high pedestal, reclined it close to the ground or reduced it to the simplest of lines and materials, and in the end established beyond any doubt that the humble form is noble.

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It is the nobility of the Mother, our Mother, Mother Earth. She is the very ground of our existence, the source and foundation of life, the lowliest and most powerful of all beings.

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I chose to refer to Moore as a "re-visionary artist" because his art brings us back to a deeper vision of our relationship to the ground below us, to our Mother, to the earth. Looking once again at a slideshow of his works, I can only feel grateful... and childlike.

Click for the slideshow.

7 comments:

Gina said...

What beautiful photos! I have never fully appreciated the ability of Moore to use his sculpture to form the space around the artwork until seeing them. To me, the roundness, touchability, sensual, natural nature of his work was inspiring on its own. Now I can't wait to see another sculpture of his to reframe my experience of it.

Lou Gold said...

Yep, the form-space aspect was new to me because I had only seen Moore's pieces enclosed in rooms or tight spaces. When the setting was opened the whole experience changed, as if the pieces themselves had been demanding freedom of spirit and connection with nature.

denise said...

Thanks so much for sending me this link - you put into words very well what also draws me to Moores work....

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the link Lou. I can see clearly that you are a fan of Henry Moore's work. The West Yorkshire sculpture park is just a little drive out of Leeds and has some of his works. It is really nice to see them in an exterior setting, out in the fields. Have you been there before?

Channy Lerner said...

Hi Lou,
Thank you for your post on my blog. I too am fascinated by Moore. The collection I have is a reflection of that. DO you collect his art work?

Lou Gold said...

Hi All,

Thanks for the comments. My only way of "collecting" Henry Moore is through photos. I've just found a treasure trove at http://www.flickr.com/groups/henrymoore/pool/

It's an open group so you might want to submit some, or just take a look. Enjoy.

Anonymous said...

SUPER!