Article 64A9Y Henry Moore Festival of Britain bronze expected to break auction records

Henry Moore Festival of Britain bronze expected to break auction records

by
Mark Brown North of England correspondent
from World news | The Guardian on (#64A9Y)

Exclusive: work that has divided opinion will be sold by Sotheby's with estimate of $30m-$40m

It was labelled a monstrosity" and a work of art so bad that it deserved to be interred, not displayed. But many more recognised it as a work of genius, Henry Moore considered it one of his finest, and later this year it is expected to break auction records as the most expensive sculpture made by a British artist.

Moore's bronze of a reclining semi-abstract figure stopped people in their tracks when it was first exhibited as a centrepiece of the Festival of Britain in 1951. It was startling and unsettling. Many adored it. Some hated it. A good number were amused by it.

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