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Gordon Moore

New Paintings and Drawings

December 8, 2005 - January 28, 2006

Oil Painting by Gordon Moore

THE EMERALDE FLY CAST

(FOR HARVEY QUATMAN), 2005

Water based paints and pumice on canvas

90 x 66 inches

228.6 x 167.64 cm

GM11096

Oil Painting by Gordon Moore

GRIP, 2005

Water based paints and pumice on canvas

90 x 66 inches

228.6 x 167.64 cm

GM11104

Oil Painting by Gordon Moore

BAIT, 2005

Water based paints and pumice on canvas

90 x 66 inches

228.6 x 167.64 cm

GM11097

GM11128

UNTITLED (NET), 2005

Latex and ink on watercolor paper

22 x 30 inches

55.88 x 76.2 cm

GM11128

Oil Painting by Gordon Moore

BOX, 2005

Pencil, ink & latex paint on paper

22 1/2 x 30 inches

57.15 x 76.2 cm

GM11162

Oil Painting by Gordon Moore

STAR, 2005

Latex and pumice on canvas

56 x 40 1/8 inches

142.24 x 101.92 cm

GM11143

Press Release

New Paintings and Drawings

December 8, 2005 – January 28, 2006

Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm

Opening: Thursday, December 8, 2005, 6 – 8 pm

On Thursday, December 8, 2005, Betty Cuningham Gallery will open an exhibition of the new paintings and drawings by Gordon Moore.

True to his early work, Moore’s paintings and drawings remain abstract and reductive.  His minimal, intentional, use of color favors his strong graphic lines.  Moore employs various combinations of latex and water based paints, ink, pencil and finely ground pumice to create works where stained/painted surfaces are divided by an irregular grid of edges made from individual rectangular templates.  Moore’s lines weave through and undulate in the light of the surface as well as in front and behind the mesh-grid.

 

Inspired by both the physical urban landscape and the concepts of classical and modern philosophers, Moore’s work illustrates the interaction between his artifacts - plastic construction netting and iron rebar - through the lens of modern philosophical analysis - the example of one such concept being John Ruskin’s, “art is not a study of positive reality, it is the seeking for ideal truth.”  Through the merger of the physical and the conceptual, Moore’s paintings and drawings seek to discuss the dual existence of the transitory and the fixed, the animate and inanimate, the permanent and the ephemeral.

Moore, born in Cherokee, Iowa in 1947, graduated from the University of Washington, Seattle in 1970 and subsequently attended Yale, where he received his MFA in 1972.  In 1976 Moore had his first one-man exhibition at Cuningham Ward in New York.  Since 1976 Moore has been included in several group and solo shows.  He received the National Endowment for the Arts-Visual Artists Fellowship (1980), the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award in Painting (1991) and the Adolph & Ester Gottlieb Foundation Award in Painting (2001).

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