Ronald Moody

Entitled Wohin (meaning in German "where to?”, the name of a song by Schubert),[2] that sculpture was bought by Marie Seton in 1935.

)[1] After having escaped from Paris, Moody travelled through occupied France, across the Pyrenees into Spain, and eventually arrived back in England in October 1941.

[7] His Paris success followed him to London, where he resumed his work after the war and had a one-man show in May 1946 at the Arcade Gallery, off Bond Street.

[8] In 1946 he cast a bronze head of his eldest brother Harold Moody (1882–1947, founder of the League of Coloured Peoples).

[9] From 1950 until the early 1960s regular London exhibitions brought Ronald Moody a growing presence on the British art scene.

Annie (1938)