View allAll Photos Tagged recliningfigure
With a wonderful exhibition, Henry Moore is portrayed as a great connecting artist of the twentieth century. His work bridges the gap between classical and modern ideals.
Detail of a crack in a plastered wall with faded, amorphous (by time?) and damaged graffiti around. Also some caked up dirt.
In some way I think the faded color tones reflect a situation between dream and being awake, AND I see a dozing figure with a loose hanging arm.
HAPPY TUESDAY'S TEXTURES !!
My eyes saw a reclining figure where a major section of the textured and painted plaster had fallen off of an old stone wall.
Away from the imagined reclining figure, there is a spectrum of textures. This is partly due to cracks and missing patches in the plaster. But in addition, the complex ways in which the paint had faded over time adds to the variety of textures.
Location: The back wall of an old garden. The wall runs for many meters along a relatively unused backstreet. The street runs along a canal in Mulhouse, Alsace FR.
In my album: Dan's Miscellany.
“The-Eye-of-the-Moment-Photos-by-Nolan-H.-Rhodes”
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Fritz Wotruba's Reclining Figure on the terrace of Kykuit. Gorgeous views of the Hudson River Valley
"Reclining Figure" by Henry Moore at Lincoln Center
Vivian Beaumont Theater designed by Eero Saarinen
ceramic and found flint 20x26x10cm DM if interest rouses and piques
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#kunst #contemporaryceramicsculpture #figurativesculpture #ceramic #flint #recliningfigure #foundsculpture #kentcoast #margate #sleepinggiant #patricklears
Escultura em bronze 'Minotauro', de Casto Solano, localizada em Vitoria-Gasteiz, Espanha. A obra, também conhecida como "O Toureiro", foi originalmente exibida na Expo 92 em Sevilha e posteriormente adquirida pelo município. Representa uma figura taurina reclinada num banco, simbolizando reflexão e a ligação cultural da cidade com a tauromaquia.
This is the dude for which "Dude Chilling Park" was named.
The dude's real name is "Reclining Figure". It is a public art piece by Michael Dennis, installed in the park in 1991.
This two-part sculpture by an artist best known for his semi-abstract monumental bronze works weighs in at about 6 tons.
I was very happy to be there and capture the view of this work of art on its last day before the renovation of this section of the Lincoln Center Plaza.
The reclining figure was one of Henry Moore’s often repeated themes. This particular bronze reclining figure was based on a small piece of bone and gigantic bones do seem present in the final work.
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"Reclining Figure", 1951 by Henry Moore in one of a number of his sculptures that have their own dedicated room in Tate Britain. This one caught my eye as rather unusually for Moore it wasn't made of bronze or marble.
When I visited Tate Britain a few weeks ago it was probably the quietest I've ever seen it. Due to lingering Covid restrictions it was advance tickets only so that may well have been a part of it.
Click here to see more of my photos of Muaeums and Galleries around the world : www.flickr.com/photos/darrellg/albums/72157608768742010
From the Tate Britain website, ""In the late 1940s, the Arts Council invited Moore to submit ideas for a sculpture to be sited at the South Bank site of the Festival of Britain. Although the organising committee suggested a family theme, Moore chose to make this tense, skeletal reclining form. The work on display is the plaster model for the bronze, which was cast in an edition of five."
© D.Godliman
Reclining Figure (Lincoln Center) 1963–5 (LH 519) is a statue by Henry Moore. The original two-part bronze statue of a human figure was commissioned for the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City, where it has been displayed outdoors since 1965 in a pool of water to the north of the new Metropolitan Opera House.
Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn
“Morning and Evening of Life” tympanum
architects: Louis Mowbray and Justin Uffinger, 1906-08
expanded by: Halsey, McCormack & Helmer, 1931-32
architectural style: Greek Classical Revival, Ionic order
Albee Square, Downtown Brooklyn
9 DeKalb Avenue at Fleet Street
Brooklyn, New York City, NY
Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn
“Morning and Evening of Life” tympanum
architects: Louis Mowbray and Justin Uffinger, 1906-08
expanded by: Halsey, McCormack & Helmer, 1931-32
architectural style: Greek Classical Revival, Ionic order
Albee Square, Downtown Brooklyn
9 DeKalb Avenue at Fleet Street
Brooklyn, New York City, NY
Sculpture called ”Reclining figure”, made 1969-70 by Henry Moore (1898-1986), Great Britain. Exhibited at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark.