Henry Moore Reading Answers : IELTS Reading Practice Test

International English Language Testing System ( IELTS )

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Avleen Kaur

Avleen KaurSr. Executive Training

Updated on Aug 6, 2024 13:41 IST
The Henry Moore reading passage is a common text used in IELTS Reading Practice and exams. It typically covers the life and work of Henry Moore, a renowned British sculptor known for his abstract forms and public works of art. By studying and practising with the Henry Moore passage, IELTS candidates can improve their reading comprehension skills, expand their vocabulary, and familiarize themselves with the types of questions and content they might encounter in the actual test.

  IELTS Reading Henry Moore Reading Answers  

Prep Tips for Answering Henry Moore Reading Passage

Tip for Henry Morre Reading Passage Details Why This Is Important
1. Skim the Passage First
  • Start by skimming the passage to get a general overview of its content.
  • Focus on the key themes such as Henry Moore’s life, artistic contributions, and his influence on modern sculpture.
  • Skimming helps you grasp the passage's overall structure and focus areas, saving time when locating answers.
2. Identify Main Ideas by Paragraph
  • Summarize the main ideas of each paragraph to understand the passage's flow.
  • Example:
    •   Paragraph 1: Introduction to Henry Moore and his significance.
    •   Paragraph 2: Details about his early life and inspirations.
    •   Paragraph 3: His artistic style, evolution, and major works.
  • Understanding the paragraph structure helps you quickly locate information and answer
matching headings or detail-based questions.
3. Highlight Keywords and Synonyms
  • Underline key information like names, dates, and artistic terms.
  • Be alert to synonyms or paraphrased ideas in the passage and questions.
  • Example: "Abstract art" might be rephrased as "non-traditional forms."
  • Recognizing synonyms ensures you understand how questions relate to the text, especially for inference-based or paraphrased questions.
4. Focus on True/False/Not Given Questions
  • Carefully match statements with the passage content:
    •   True: The statement fully agrees with the text.
    •   False: The statement directly contradicts the text.
    •   Not Given: No information about the statement is available.
  • This strategy helps you evaluate facts versus opinions and ensures accuracy when identifying direct matches or contradictions in the passage.
5. Matching Headings to Paragraphs
  • Locate the main idea of each paragraph to match it with the correct heading.
  • Look for topic sentences and concluding lines for clues.
  • Matching headings requires a clear understanding of each paragraph’s primary focus, which improves comprehension and accuracy.
6. Vocabulary Building
  • Familiarize yourself with terms related to art, sculpture, and modernism.
  • Example: "figurative," "minimalist," "biomorphic forms," and "public art installations."
  • Knowledge of specialised vocabulary helps quickly understand technical terms without relying on guessing.
7. Manage Time Effectively
  • Allocate around 20 minutes for this passage.
  • Avoid spending too much time on one difficult question. Move on and return later if needed.
  • Managing time ensures that you attempt all questions, increasing your chances of maximising your score.
8. Review Your Answers
  • Double-check your answers for accuracy, especially for names and dates.
  • Ensure spelling is correct and follows the question’s
instructions.
  • Reviewing minimises avoidable errors, such as incorrect spelling or misinterpreting instructions.
9. Write in UPPERCASE
  • Write all answers in UPPERCASE to avoid errors in capitalization and punctuation.
  • Writing in uppercase prevents confusion between upper and lowercase letters, especially in proper nouns or technical terms.
10. Practice with Art-Related Passages
  • Regularly practice reading passages on art, artists, and biographies to build familiarity with similar topics.
  • Familiarity with similar topics improves speed, understanding, and ability to recognize question types effectively.
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Henry Moore (1898-1986) Reading Passage

The below Henry Moore (1898-1986) reading passage is inspired by Cambridge 15, Test 3 for your practice. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on the reading passage 1 below.

The British sculptor Henry Moore was a leading figure in the 20th-century art world.
A
Henry Moore was born in Castleford, a small town near Leeds in the north of England. He was the seventh child of Raymond Moore and his wife Mary Baker. He studied at Castleford Grammar School from 1909 to 1915, where his early interest in art was encouraged by his teacher Alice Gostick.

After leaving school, Moore hoped to become a sculptor, but instead he complied with his father’s wish that he train as a schoolteacher. He had to abandon his training in 1917 when he was sent to France to fight in the First World War.

B
After the war, Moore enrolled at the Leeds School of Art, where he studied for two years. In his first year, he spent most of his time drawing. Although he wanted to study sculpture, no teacher was appointed until his second year.

At the end of that year, he passed the sculpture examination and was awarded a scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London. In September 1921, he moved to London and began three years of advanced study in sculpture.


C

Alongside the instruction he received at the Royal College, Moore visited many of the London museums, particularly the British Museum, which had a wide-ranging collection of ancient sculpture. During these visits, he discovered the power and beauty of ancient Egyptian and African sculpture. As he became increasingly interested in these ‘primitive’ forms of art, he turned away from European sculptural traditions.

D
After graduating, Moore spent the first six months of 1925 travelling in France. When he visited the Trocadero Museum in Paris, he was impressed by a cast of a Mayan* sculpture of the rain spirit. It was a male reclining figure with its knees drawn up together, and its head at a right angle to its body. Moore became fascinated with this stone sculpture, which he thought had a power and originality that no other stone sculpture possessed. He himself started carving a variety of subjects in stone, including depiction of reclining women, mother-and-child groups, and masks.

E 
Moore’s exceptional talent soon gained recognition, and in 1926 he started work as a sculpture instructor at the Royal College.

In 1933, he became a member of a group of young artists called Unit One.

The aim of the group was to convince the English public of the merits of the emerging international movement in modern art and architecture.

F
Around this time, Moore moved away from the human figure to experiment with abstract shapes.

In 1931, he held an exhibition at the Leicester Galleries in London. His work was enthusiastically welcomed by fellow sculptors, but the reviews in the press were extremely negative and turned Moore into a notorious figure. There were calls for his resignation from the Royal College, and the following year, when his contract expired, he left to start a sculpture department at the Chelsea School of Art in London.

G
Throughout the 1930s, Moore did not show any inclination to please the British public. He became interested in the paintings of the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, whose work inspired him to distort the human body in a radical way. At times, he seemed to abandon the human figure altogether. The pages of his sketchbooks from this period show his ideas for abstract sculptures that bore little resemblance to the human form.

H
In 1940, during the Second World War, Moore stopped teaching at the Chelsea School and moved to a farmhouse about 20 miles north of London. A shortage of materials forced him to focus on drawing. He did numerous small sketches of Londoners, later turning these ideas into large coloured drawings in his studio.

In 1942, he returned to Castleford to make a series of sketches of the miners who worked there.

I
In 1944, Harlow, a town near London, offered Moore a commission for a sculpture depicting a family. The resulting work signifies a dramatic change in Moore’s style, away from the experimentation of the 1930s towards a more natural and humanistic subject matter. He did dozens of studies in clay for the sculpture, and these were cast in bronze and issued in editions of seven to nine copies each. In this way, Moore’s work became available to collectors all over the world.

The boost to his income enabled him to take on ambitious projects and start working on the scale he felt his sculpture demanded.

J

Critics who had begun to think that Moore had become less revolutionary were proven wrong by the appearance, in 1950, of the first of Moore’s series of standing figures in bronze, with their harsh and angular pierced forms and distinct impression of menace. Moore also varied his subject matter in the 1950s with such works as Warrior with Shield and Falling Warrior. These were rare examples of Moore’s use of the male figure and owe something to his visit to Greece in 1951, when he had the opportunity to study ancient works of art.

K
In his final years, Moore created the Henry Moore Foundation to promote art appreciation and to display his work.

Moore was the first modern English sculptor to achieve international critical acclaim and he is still regarded as one of the most important sculptors of the 20th century.








Henry Moore (1898-1986) Reading Answers - Question 1-6

The Reading Passage has sections, A-K.
Which section contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-K in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.

1. Moore’s awareness of ancient sculpture due to a visit.

Answer: C
Answer location: Section C, Line 1
Explanation: It can be seen in the third section that “Moore visited many of the London museums, particularly the British Museum, which had a wide-ranging collection of ancient sculpture. During these visits, he discovered the power and beauty of ancient Egyptian and African sculpture.” From these lines, it can be said that Moore first became aware of the ancient sculpture when he visited these museums. 

2. One member’s interest to make modern art and architecture popular.

Answer: E
Answer location: Section E, line 2
Explanation: In the mentioned lines, it is provided that “In 1933, he became a member of a group of young artists called Unit One. The aim of the group was to convince the English public of the merits of the emerging international movement in modern art and architecture.” It can be inferred that the members of this group wanted to convince people about the merits of modern art and architecture and make them popular.

3. Factor leading to Moore’s shift to drawing.

Answer: H
Answer location: Section H, line 1
Explanation: “In 1940, during the Second World War, Moore stopped teaching at the Chelsea School and moved to a farmhouse about 20 miles north of London. A shortage of materials forced him to focus on drawing.” The given lines highlight that he had to withdraw from sculpting because of the lack of resources and start drawing instead.

4. Example of the artistic work leading to recognition

Answer: J
Answer location: Section J, line 2
Explanation: This section provides an example  of Moore’s work, “In 1950, the first of Moore’s series of standing figures in bronze, with their harsh and angular pierced forms and distinct impression of menace.” His series of standing bronze figurines were identified for their unique and impending forms.

5. Captivation towards the authenticity of the work.

Answer: D
Answer location: Section D, line 1
Explanation: In this section, "He visited the Trocadero Museum in Paris, and he was impressed by a cast of a Mayan sculpture of the rain spirit. Moore became fascinated with this stone sculpture, which he thought had a power and originality that no other stone sculpture possessed,” describes Moore’s attraction to the originality of the work.

6. Initial encouragement of the interest in the art subject.

Answer: A
Answer location: Section A, line 3
Explanation: This line -"His early interest in art was encouraged by his teacher Alice Gostick." -  highlights that Moore’s initial interest was encouraged by his school teacher during his time at Castleford Grammar School.







Henry Moore (1898-1986) Reading Answers - Questions 7-13

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet, write:

TRUE - If the statement agrees with the information

FALSE - If the statement contradicts the information

NOT GIVEN - If there is no information on this

7. A scholarship was awarded to Moore from the Leeds School of Art

Answer: FALSE
Answer location: Section B, line 3
Explanation: “At the end of that year, he passed the sculpture examination and was awarded a scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London." The scholarship was awarded by the Royal College of Art, not the Leeds School of Art.

8. Moore’s work was admired by the British people.

Answer: FALSE
Answer location: Section F, line 2
Explanation: "His work was enthusiastically welcomed by fellow sculptors, but the reviews in the press were extremely negative and turned Moore into a notorious figure."
Some fellow sculptors welcomed Moore's work, but the British press was reluctant and gave him a hard time, turning him into a negative figure. 

9. The drawings of the minors were created during Moore’s visit to his hometown.

Answer: TRUE
Answer location: Section H, last line
Explanation: "In 1942, he returned to Castleford to make a series of sketches of the miners who worked there." This line clearly states that Moore made sketches of miners during his visit to his hometown, Castleford.

10. Sculpture of the family made by Moore led him to receive a commission.

Answer: TRUE
Answer location: Section I, line 1
Explanation: "In 1944, Harlow, a town near London, offered Moore a commission for a sculpture depicting a family."  Moore created a sculpture of a family; his work led to this commission from Harlow.

11. Moore’s work was sold to the collectors due to a lack of funding.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Answer location: Section I, line 5
Explanation: Although it is mentioned that “Moore’s work became available to collectors all over the world. The boost to his income enabled him to take on ambitious projects and start working on the scale he felt his sculpture demanded”, there is no information provided about Moore’s work being sold to collectors due to a lack of funding.

12. Due to his series of abstract sculptures and the standing figures in Bronze, Moore gained recognition.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Answer location: Section J, line 1
Explanation: Although the mention of the standing figures in bronze in Section J does indicate that these works had a significant impact, the passage does not explicitly state that these figures led to Moore gaining recognition.

13. Moore remained a well-known sculpturist of his own time.

Answer: FALSE
Answer location: Section K, line 2
Explanation: "Moore was the first modern English sculptor to achieve international critical acclaim and he is still regarded as one of the most important sculptors of the 20th century. This indicates that Moore wasn’t only famous when he was alive, but he is still acknowledged.

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Tajkia Sultana

7 months ago

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7 months ago

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