HENRY MOORE STUDIOS & GARDENS
- Henry Moore
Dane Tree House, Perry Green, Much Hadham SG10 6EE
Henry Moore was born in 1898 in Yorkshire, England. After serving in World War I, he studied at the Leeds School of Art and the Royal College of Art in London. He became known for his semi-abstract monumental bronze sculptures of the human figure, particularly reclining figures, mother and child groups, and internal/external forms.

In 1940, during World War II, Moore and his wife Irina moved from London to Hertfordshire to escape the Blitz. They rented Hoglands, a farmhouse in the small hamlet of Perry Green, about 30 miles north of London. What was meant to be a temporary refuge became Moore's permanent home and workplace for the next 46 years until his death in 1986.
Moore initially worked in a small cottage on the property but soon needed more space for his increasingly large commissions. In 1965, he converted several farm buildings into studios, including a large top studio with massive sliding doors and an overhead crane for moving heavy sculptures. The property eventually expanded to 70 acres of gardens and fields where Moore could site his monumental works.


The studios reveal Moore's working process. He would begin with small maquettes working out compositions and forms. These would be scaled up in plaster before being cast in bronze at nearby foundries. The property contains three main studio buildings: the small studio where he drew and made maquettes, the large top studio where he worked on full-scale plasters, and the tapestry studio where he created prints and drawings.
Moore designed the landscape around Perry Green deliberately, placing his sculptures throughout the grounds so they could be experienced in dialogue with nature. He believed sculpture should be viewed in natural light and landscape, not isolated in white cube galleries.
After Moore's death in 1986, his daughter Mary established the Henry Moore Foundation to preserve his legacy. The estate opened to the public in 2007 as the Henry Moore Studios & Gardens. Visitors can tour the studios.

