Henry Moore is known for his large sculptures that often depict people (usually women, often reclining/laying back). When you know the title, it’s easier to identify what he is representing.
Henry Moore, The Arch (1979-80), Kew Gardens, London
Moore, Family Group (1946)
Moore, UNESCO Reclining Figure (1957–58), Paris
Moore, Mother and Child: Hood (1983), St. Paul’s Cathedral, London
Moore, West Wind (1928), London Underground Limited HQ (above St. James’s Park tube station), London
Moore, Sheep Piece (1971-72), Perry Green Hertfordshire, UK
Moore, Reclining Figure, Tate Britain, London
Moore, King and Queen (1958), Glenkiln Sculpture Park, Scotland
Moore, Figure in a Shelter (1983), Pembroke College, Cambridge
Moore, Mother and Child with Apple (1956), private collection
Moore, Large Two Forms (1966), Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Moore, Rocking Chair No. 1 (1950), private collection
Moore, Oval with Points (1968-70), Kew Gardens, London
Moore, Interior Form (1951), The Henry Moore Foundation
Moore with Knife Edge Two Piece (1962-65) in Perry Green
Read more
About Henry Moore, from the Henry Moore Institute