Henry Moore: London 1940-42
Henry Moore: London 1940-42

Henry Moore: London 1940-42

January 01, 1963 | 13 min

A montage, using documentary material filmed during the war, shows the beginnings of an air attack and Londoners entering shelters. From the silent deserted streets, the film moves underground into the world of Henry Moore's shelter drawings. People sit along subway platforms, looking after their children, settling down for the night, sleeping in bunks and on the floor. Above ground London burns. Henry Moore used the eye of a sculptor in portraying the stolidity and enduring patience of a besieged people. This film brings together a unique series of drawings which are some of the most remarkable achievements of an artist during wartime. Eliminating all narration, it explores, on several metaphoric levels, the very nature of human consciousness and creativity.

Genres

Documentary

Cast

Share on social media

More Like This

The Flood
Enrico Caruso: A Voice for the Ages
Las Muralistas: Our Walls, Our Stories
Vermeer: The Greatest Exhibition
MAU WAL - Translated Encounters
Marepe
Unwavering Light
Hopper: An American Love Story
Peter Monaghan: A Portrait
Inventory
Pictura
Secret Mall Apartment
The Painter and the Thief
Gauguin: A Dangerous Life
Namatjira Project
Displaced Perssons
A Weaverly Path: The Tapestry Life of Silvia Heyden
Tell Them We Were Here
David Choe: High Risk
Freeze: But is it Art?