Every month, hundreds of galleries add newly available works by thousands of artists to the Artnet Gallery Network—and every week, we shine a spotlight on one artist you should know. Check out what we ...
Henry Moore, “Reclining Figure: Bone” (1975), travertine; photo: Henry Moore Archive, reproduced by permission of The Henry Moore Foundation (all images courtesy the Hepworth Wakefield) WAKEFIELD, ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Chadd Scott covers the intersection of art and travel. Oh, come on. Museums bringing together big-name artists under the thinnest ...
Georgia O’Keeffe spent her last years in the high desert of New Mexico, a celebrated recluse painting bleached skulls and folds of ruddy earth beneath the spotless blue skies of the American Southwest ...
This post was paid for and produced by our sponsor, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in collaboration with WBUR’s Business Partnerships team. WBUR’s editorial teams are independent of business teams and ...
Henry Moore put modern sculpture on the map. Everybody has heard of him; a first in our field. But it’s not just about famehe changed public perceptions of art. In the 1930s his sculptures were highly ...
Henry Moore’s “Reclining Figure Bone” sculpture slopes down like the curves of a body or rolling hills. Two smooth openings peer into Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Pelvis IV” painting — a soft blue sky with a ...
At first glance, the paintings of Georgia O’Keeffe and the sculptures of Henry Moore seem to have little in common. A one-of-a-kind exhibition at the Albuquerque Museum proves otherwise by uniting ...
“It is a mistake for a sculptor or painter to speak or write very often about his job,” cautioned Henry Moore in 1937, relatively early in his career. “It releases tension needed for his work.” ...