Biography
Henry Moore
was born in Castleford, in small terraced house in Roundhill
Road on 30th July 1898. He attended Castleford Grammar School
on a scholarship and subsequently became a teacher there. His
teaching was interrupted by the First World War during which
he fought in France and was gassed. After the War he returned
to his teaching post but knew he wanted something better so
he began studying at the Leeds School of Art from which he progressed
to the Royal College of Art in London.
In 1924
he met Irina Radetsky, a painting student at the college, whom
he married a year later. The couple lived in Hampstead, where
they mingled with many aspiring young artists including another
sculptor from this area, Barbara Hepworth.
His
early sculptures of the 1920s, show the influences of Central
American pre-Columbian art, and the massive figures of the Italian
Renaissance (he particualrly liked Michaelangelo's work). By
the 1930s his works had become highly abstract, consisting of
simplified, rounded pieces carved from wood, with numerous indentations
and holes often spanned with veils of thin metal wires. His
main themes include mother-and-child and family groups, fallen
warriors, and, most characteristically, the reclining human
figure.
Although
he endured much criticism of his early work, in 1948 he was
awarded the International Prize for Sculpture and his reputation
worldwide grew over the following decades. He is also well known
for his sketches of people sheltering in the London underground
during the Second World War, and of working miners. The latter
were sketched at Wheldale Colliery near Castleford where his
father had worked. His sculptures can be seen at the Yorkshire
Sculpture Park near Wakefield.
A version
of his Reclining Figure Draped is on show outside of the Civic
Centre at Castleford and his first Reclining Figure from 1936
at Wakefield Art Gallery.
He died
in 1986 and in September 2000 Moore Square was opened on the
site of his Castleford birthplace.