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  1. Learn about the original plaster sculpture of a reclining figure by Henry Moore, created for the Festival of Britain in 1951. See details of the technique, condition, history and meaning of this iconic work.

  2. Reclining Figure: Festival (LH 293) is a bronze sculpture by English artist Henry Moore, commissioned by the Arts Council in 1949 for the Festival of Britain in 1951. The sculpture can be viewed as an abstraction of a reclining female human figure, resting on two arms, with a small head.

  3. Reclining Figure: Bunched. ‘Reclining Figure‘, Henry Moore OM, CH, 1951 on display at Tate Britain.

  4. A bronze sculpture of a reclining woman with a classical pose and a mottled green patina. Learn about the artist, the style, the date, and the provenance of this work from The Met collection.

  5. Reclining Figure 1969–70 (LH 608) is a bronze sculpture by English artist Henry Moore . History. Inspired by the shape of a piece of flint, Moore created a maquette for the sculpture in plaster which was cast in an edition of small bronzes, some 15 centimetres (5.9 in) long.

  6. Learn about Reclining Figure, a bronze sculpture by Henry Moore inspired by Mexican chacmool. Find out its dimensions, edition, ownership, collections, and exhibitions.

  7. Made at Henry Moore’s home in Kent, Reclining Figure is an example of the artist’s experiments with lead casting in the late 1930s. Its molten, rounded forms testify to Moore’s interest in organic shapes and the sculptures of Jean Arp, while drawings relating to this work reveal that Moore imagined enlarging it and positioning it within a ...