Bill Brandt | Henry Moore
18 May - 22 August 2021Tickets: £13 or FREE for Members and UEA/NUA Student Members
Concessions available
50% off for under 18's, full-time students & Art Fund Members
Tickets must be pre-booked online before arrival with a specific time slot
Please be ready to go into the exhibition for your chosen time slot
Due to restricted numbers, we are currently not able to offer group visits
Dates are subject to change in line with government guidance
★★★★ The Guardian ★★★★ The Telegraph
This exhibition explores the parallel and intersecting paths of these two great artists of the 20th century.
The photographer Bill Brandt and the sculptor Henry Moore first met during the Second World War, when they both created images of civilians sheltering from the Blitz in the London Underground. These photographs by Brandt and drawings by Moore have become some of the most iconic images of the period. This exhibition explores their shared subjects including coal miners and their families, Stonehenge, and the body presented as landscape.
With almost 200 works ranging across sculpture, maquettes, photographs, drawings and collage, the exhibition includes Brandt’s rare colour transparencies and Moore’s little-known photo collages.
The exhibition is in collaboration with the Yale Center for British Art and the Hepworth Wakefield.
Principal Supporter: Simon Blakey
Quote taken from a review by the Guardian