• Time Out New York Kids
    • Time Out Chicago
    • Time Out Worldwide
    • Travel
    • Book store
    • Subscribe to Time Out New York
    • Subscriber Services
  • Time Out New York
  • Ad Space
    (728 x 90)
  • Search
  •  
    • Home
    • Art
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Games
    • Gay
    • I, New York
    • Kids
    • Museums
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Own This City
    • Real Estate
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Sport
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV & DVD
    • Video
  • « BACK TO SEARCH
    • Essentials

      • Info & map
        • event:  “Moore in America”


    • Tools

      • E-mail

        E-mail a friend





        • * Mandatory

        • View our privacy policy
      • Print
      • Rate & comment
        [X]

        • (will not appear on site)
          *Required
          •  characters left

        • View our privacy policy
      • Report an error

        Report an error


        • View our privacy policy
      • Share this
        • Delicious
        • Digg
        • Facebook
        • reddit
        • StumbleUpon

  • Blogs

    The TONY Blog

    • Gossip Girl, season two: “It’s a Wonderful Lie”

    • Published at 1:09pm

    • After a weeklong hiatus, the Best Show Ever returned last night…and we’re feeling kind of meh about the whole thing. Seriously, did anything interesting happen...

    More posts »



    NYC holidays

    See the complete guide »



    Video

    Tons of clips!

    • Get a heads-up on the week’s top events, go inside the hottest restaurants and trendiest shops, and more.

    Watch videos »



  • Ad Space
    (120 x 240)


  • TONY Student Guide

    • Essential advice for our scholastically minded citizens.



    Continuing Education

    • Never stop learning. There's no excuse not to go back to school.



    Visitor info

    • Everything you need to know to get the most out of New York City.



    TONY Free Flix

    • Get free tickets to hot new movie releases.



    Prizes & Promotions

    • Win prizes and get discounts, event invites and more.



    TONY Nightlife+

    • Get real-time information for bars, clubs and restaurants on your mobile.



    TONY on the radio

    • Tune in to Out There with TONY on WPS1.org for conversations with our editors and special guests.



    Subscribe

    • • Subscribe now

    • • Give a gift

    • • Subscriber services



  • Own This City
    Time Out New York / Issue 660 : May 22–28, 2008

    Moore to love

    The New York Botanical Garden opens its gates to master sculptor Henry Moore.

    By Dan Avery

    OH HENRY! Oval with Points (1968–70) was inspired by an elephant skull.
    Photograph: Anita Feldman/Henry Moore Foundation

    There were considerable logistics involved in transporting 20 monumental sculptures by the late Henry Moore from London’s Kew Gardens to the New York Botanical Garden for the Bronx institution’s new exhibit, “Moore in America.” The pieces, some of which weigh nearly 5 tons and measure more than 20 feet tall, had to be shipped across the Atlantic and couldn’t be driven over roads with low clearance. Once at the garden, workers had to carefully choreograph their cranes so that plants weren’t trampled when the sculptures were hoisted into position. And though the show opens Saturday 24, the precautions aren’t complete: A lightweight fiberglass sculpture, Large Reclining Figure (1984), will have to be strapped down in the event of strong winds.

    The fruits of these labors, says Henry Moore Foundation curator Anita Feldman, is an exhibition that greatly enriches both the artwork and the flora. “There’s an incredible natural harmony at play. Moore’s works make these wonderful frames for the landscape,” she explains. “And the garden setting completely changes the art. This is one of the few places we can do a big outdoor show like this. The pieces just eat space.” The park’s varied terrain is also well suited to Moore’s sculpture, which was inspired by bones, rocks, driftwood and other natural forms.

    The NYBG has served as a lush, tree-lined gallery in the past—works from MoMA’s Rockefeller Sculpture Garden were housed there during the museum’s 2002–03 renovation, and Dale Chihuly’s glass curiosities were prominently displayed in 2006—but this is the grandest presentation in recent memory. “The sculptures are spread across even more of the garden,” says Todd Forrest, NYBG’s vice president of horticulture and living collections. “And while the Chihuly show was stunning, it was clearly an addition. Moore’s work is more complement than contrast.”

    Placement was a key issue for the curators: Forrest presented Feldman with a range of locations, and she chose the work best suited to a particular space. Two Piece Reclining Figure: Points (1969) is located in front of a series of craggy rocks that mirror its sharp features, for example, while the rock garden was chosen for the site of a rotund Seated Woman (1958–59). “She’s very quiet and contemplative, and has this wonderful bronze patina,” says Feldman. “It’s perfect for that spot. You wouldn’t want her in the middle of a field—she’d be lost.” Feldman didn’t plan a specific order for the sculptures to be seen in and, while there is a map available with a suggested route, Forrest says he hopes visitors approach the pieces on their own terms.

    “Moore in America,” which will only travel to the Atlanta Botanical Garden before the sculptures are returned to their permanent home at Perry Green in Hertfordshire, England, is by no means a retrospective of the prolific artist, who died in 1986 at age 88. But it is emblematic of his art starting in the 1950s, when he began producing large-scale works suitable for outdoor settings. Forrest’s favorite in the collection is Oval with Points (1968–70), a large bronze figure eight near the Tanyosho pines in the Ross Conifer Arboretum—he calls it “a bold, muscular beacon” that draws patrons from the visitor’s center, which is in its direct sight line. Feldman is partial to the spacious Large Two Forms (1966) on Daffodil Hill. “It’s completely unexpected—it looks different from every angle, which is the beauty of showing outdoors. And you can walk inside it and be totally enclosed by it.”

    Of course, we’ll never know what Moore would think of Feldman’s choices. But he once opined that he “would rather have a piece of sculpture put in a landscape, almost any landscape, than in or on the most beautiful building I know.” How fortunate, then, that these works are in an environment that is itself a work of art.

    “Moore in America” is on view at the New York Botanical Garden Saturday, May 24–Sunday, Nov 2.


    • Comments
    • |
    • Leave a comment
    [X]

    • (will not appear on site)
      *Required
      •  characters left

    • View our privacy policy

    • No comments yet. Click here and be the first!


      • Subscribe now and save 90%!

      • For just $19.97 a year, you'll get hundreds of listings and free events each week, plus our special issues and guides, including Cheap Eats, Great Spas, Fall Preview, Holiday Gift Guide and more!
      • Time Out Covers
      • Time Out New York respects your privacy. We will only use your e-mail address in order to contact you regarding to your subscription and to send you our weekly e-newsletter. We will not share this information with anyone.

  • Ad Space
    (320 x 110)

    Ad Space
    (300 x 250)

  • Cause of the week

    • Teachin’ English
    • Teachin’ English

    • Help immigrants learn to speak English—then invite them over for a holiday dinner! (We promise they'll be better behaved than Borat.)


    The 311

    • Bowling
    • Bowling

    • Where to bowl in all five boroughs. (Yes, even Staten Island.)

    • Live from New York
    • Live from New York

    • Jon, Martha, Judge David and more! We tell you how to get tickets to TV's hottest live tapings.

    • This is Essential
    • This is Essential

    • What's at the top of the OTC speed dial? Just a few of our favorite people, places and things…


    Bust a move

    • Paintball
    • Paintball

    • Put the skills you learned from Call of Duty to use at the city’s only indoor battleground.

    • Rugby
    • Rugby

    • The New York Manhattan Rugby Club likes its players strong and its booze even stronger.

    • Double Dutch
    • Double Dutch

    • Miss Mary Mack, Mack, Mack...join an adults-only Double Dutch league!

    • Archery
    • Archery

    • Learn how to become an arrow-wielding badass assassin!

    • The timid biker
    • The timid biker

    • This supersafe (and scenic!) route is perfect for newbie bicyclists.


    Sneak peek

    • Brooklyn Bridge Park
    • Brooklyn Bridge Park

    • There'll be more than picnic baskets at this 85-acre Dumbo dream park, whose construction finally gets under way this week.


    Park life

    • Tompkins Square Park
    • Tompkins Square Park

    • Though many of its mourners never experienced the police skirmishes, homeless colonies and hypodermic needles of Tompkins Square Park, they lament ’em nonetheless.

    • Bronx River Forest
    • Bronx River Forest

    • The Bronx River Forest used to be a hotbed for prostitutes, junkies and glory-hole seekers—but no more, friends.

    • Cortona Park
    • Cortona Park

    • Head to SoBro for 11 playgrounds, an Olympic-sized pool, 20 tennis courts, five baseball diamonds and “butterfly bushes.”


    School yo'self

    • "China: A New Hope or a Threat to the World?"
    • "China: A New Hope or a Threat to the World?"

    • Read the experts' opinions and then chime in at this panel discussion, part of the international Battle Satellites program.


  • Most viewed in Own This City

    • Articles
    • Venues
    • Holiday trees
    • Rock & Roll Annex
    • Label bodied
    • Window shopping
    • Your perfect weekend
    • Ice skating
    • Have a heart
    • The Bronx
    • Latin quarter
    • “Luxury”
    • Woolworth Building
    • Museum of Sex (MoSex)
    • The Skyscraper Museum
    • American Museum of Natural History
    • Borders Columbus Circle
    • Metropolitan Opera House (at Lincoln Center)
    • Museum of the City of New York
    • American Folk Art Museum
    • Bridgewaters at South Street Seaport
    • Sports Museum of America

  • Ad Space
    (160 x 600)

    Ad Space
    (160 x 600)

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit & Advertising
    • Get Listed
    • We're Hiring
    • Subscribe
    • Subscriber Services
    • Site Map
    • Home
    • Art
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Games
    • Gay
    • I, New York
    • Kids
    • Museums
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Own This City
    • Real Estate
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Sport
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV & DVD
    • Video
    • Visit our sister sites:
    • Time Out New York Kids
    • Time Out Chicago
    • Time Out London
    • Time Out Worldwide
    Copyright © 2000–2008 Time Out New York