The 'Sculpture' Run - June 8th 2023

This is an Milton Keynes & Chilterns proposed run to the Henry Moore Sculpture Park, Studios and Gardens, located in the East Hertfordshire countryside, close to the village of Much Hadham. This run will depend on interest. Ticket prices are shown on the Henry Moore Sculpture Park Website.

Planning to meet at Poplars Garden Centre at between 09:30, with a briefing at 09:45, and the run starting at 10:00. The run will take an indirect route using A & B roads taking approx 2hrs and cover approx 50miles.

More info about the Henry Moore Sculpture Park, Studios and Gardens…

Experience Henry Moore’s iconic work in the beautiful Hertfordshire countryside with a visit to the artist’s former home, studios and sculpture gardens.

For Moore, nature and the human body were sources of vitality, expressions of life-force which he could harness in his work, uniting and concentrating their vital energy.

Although his forms often appear abstract, Moore was fundamentally a figurative artist, and the human body remained his core concern throughout his life. In his maquette studio, he surrounded himself with natural forms – bones, stones, shells and driftwood – which he transformed into figures through the addition of clay, plasticine and plaster. When he enlarged these works and placed them outside, the rise and fall of the body – knees, breasts, and shoulders – echoed the forms of the land.

Moore enhanced the relationship of his works to their environment by incorporating space within them. He broke the figure into multiple parts and pierced his sculptures to create holes, making space a part of the sculpture and bringing the landscape into the very form of the work.

In 2023, more than twenty monumental bronzes inspired by natural and human forms are displayed in the landscape surrounding the studios where Moore developed ideas. Multi-part reclining figures are joined by some of his purest organic abstractions and works exploring his most iconic themes: the mother and child, the reclining figure, and the juxtaposition of internal and external forms.