Becoming Henry Moore Leaflet PDF
Becoming Henry Moore Leaflet PDF
Becoming Henry Moore Leaflet PDF
Henry Moore
Becoming Henry Moore
30 November 2017 – 18 February 2018
Galleries 1, 2 & 3
Henry Moore
‘Three-Quarter Figure’ (1928)
David Dye:
Devices
Until 18 February 2018
Sculpture Study Galleries
Coinciding with the reopening of Leeds Art relationships between artworks and viewers,
Gallery, this exhibition of the work of David using projectors, cameras, screens, mirrors
Dye (1945–2015) charts a young artist’s and the human body in various configurations.
transition from sculpture to photography and Dye often referred to his works as ‘devices’
film in the 1960s and 1970s. Drawing upon and this exhibition takes up this term,
the large archive that the artist generously highlighting his careful staging of objects and
bequeathed to the Henry Moore Institute’s spectator locations and his ongoing poetic
Archive of Sculptors’ Papers, it presents exploration of projection and screening.
sculpture, drawings, sketchbooks, notebooks, His sculpture ‘Distancing Device’ (1970),
photographs, films and a number of his early on display in the exhibition, coordinates the
presentation boards. movements of the viewer, while films such as
Mirror Film (1971), Towards/Away from (1972)
David Dye: Devices focuses on the and Blind Spot (1973) control the eye with
development of Dye’s work between 1967 careful precision.
and 1977, from his student years at St
Martin’s School of Art to early recognition in The Institute’s Archive of Sculptors’ Papers
publications such as Studio International and is unique in documenting the history of
in exhibitions such as Young Contemporaries sculpture in Britain from the mid-eighteenth
(1970) and The New Art (1972) at the century to the present day. The Archive,
Hayward Gallery. This dynamic first decade as part of the Sculpture Collection of Leeds
soon saw him at the heart of radical changes, Museums and Galleries, and the Institute’s
working at the intersection of sculpture and Research Library provide an unrivalled
film, as Dye wrote in an early notebook: ‘I had research resource for the study of sculpture.
art history on one shoulder and the history The Institute manages and develops the
of film on another.’ This exhibition shows internationally renowned Sculpture Collection
Dye’s increasingly subtle investigations of the on behalf of Leeds Museums and Galleries.
Mary Gillick:
Her Art in Your Pocket
Until 28 January 2018
Gallery 4
Godfrey Worsdale
Henry Moore Lecture Theatre,
Leeds Art Gallery
Followed by mulled wine and mince pies
in the Henry Moore Institute reception
Cover Image:
Henry Moore c. 1929-30 with ‘Reclining Figure’
(1929) and ‘Mask’ (1930)
Courtesy Leeds Museums and Galleries
(Leeds Art Gallery)
Photo: © Henry Moore Foundation Archive