Anthony Caro’s drawings corrected by Henry Moore to go on show for first time

Arts

Anthony Caro, Seated Woman (with corrections by Henry Moore, 1951-52)
© Courtesy of Barford Sculptures Ltd Photo: Christopher Cunningham

A series of newly identified drawings illustrating one major 20th-century artist learning his craft in the studio of another, Anthony Caros work corrected by Henry Moore, will go on display for the first time in an exhibition opening in May, at the East Gallery of Norwich University of the Arts.

The exhibition's curator Neil Powell, a sculptor himself, found the life drawings in a folder in archives in south London of Caro, who died in 2013. He saw immediately that they represented the hands of two artists, and he recognised their work immediately—Caro and his then boss, and as the drawings prove, his tutor, Moore. Powell revered the work of both men: he met Caro several times at the Royal College of Art, where Powell was a Henry Moore scholarship student.

“Its not really correct to say that Caros drawings had been corrected by Moore—this is Moore gently indicating to him through hatching and shading how to achieve something that was central to the work of both men, weight, mass, three dimensionality, not just a two dimensional image on a piece of paper.”

Anthony Caro, Life Drawing-Figure Standing (with corrections by Henry Moore, 1951-52)
© Courtesy of Barford Sculptures Ltd Photo: Christopher Cunningham

Powell thinks the drawings are a telling demonstration of the affectionate relationship between the two men. Caro, born in 1924, worked for two years as a studio assistant to Moore, who was 26 years older and already a world famous artist. “When Moore had hired a model, if he was working on one of his reclining or standing figures, and there was an hour or so to spare at the end of the day, Caro was free to make his own work—and as the drawings prove, Moore took a keen constructive interest in that work.”

Together with the four life drawings, made in 1951-52, in charcoal, ink and pencil on vellum, the exhibition will also include 12 slightly later monotype prints, also being shown for the first time, made by Caro for his Warrior series in 1953-54.

Anthony Caro, Woman Lying Down (with corrections by Henry Moore, 1951-52)
© Courtesy of Barford Sculptures Ltd Photo: Christopher Cunningham

Moores monumental bronzes are in major collections and public sites across the world. Caro would go further into purely abstract sculpture, including works in painted steel and iron taken off traditional gallery plinths to stand directly on the floor.

Anthony Caro, Warrior (1953-54)
© Courtesy of BarRead More – Source

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