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John
L. Moore
Painter
As a boy, John Moore was drawn to water. He played for hours on
the banks of Doan Creek near the place where it flowed into Lake
Erie. Years later, when he began to paint, he found himself trying
to bring together the quicksilver texture or nervous turbulence
of flowing water and the stark architectural shapes of his inner-city
neighborhood. It was not what he saw that he found himself
trying to get on canvas, but what he experienced when confronted
with these mysterious presences. For Moore (who was born in 1939)
is interested in the relationship of humankind to its surroundings,
especially the urban landscape, and the interior, psychic spaces
our experience of the physical world helps to shape.
His
spare style, the subdued, deliberately limited palette of colors
and the simple shapes with which he works contribute to the intensity
of his vision. I work intuitively, the artist has said.
I lay down a shape that's been bugging me; I push it along.
Pulsating with energy and incipient meaning, Moore's paintings,
at once abstract and deeply personal, demonstrate the power of the
creative act and the endless ability of art to find fresh things
to tell us about the experience of being alive.
His
work has been shown in more than two dozen solo exhibitions and
more than a score of group shows and is included in numerous private,
public and corporate collections throughout the U.S. and Canada-among
them the New York Public Library, the Brooklyn Museum, the Hahn
Loeser & Parks corporate collection in Cleveland, and the Montgomery
Museum of Fine Art in Alabama. In 1996, the year after he received
the Cleveland Arts Prize in Visual Arts, Moore was commissioned
to do a ceiling mural for the new Louis Stokes addition to the Cleveland
Public Library.
Two
Blacks
1990
Oil on canvas
66" x 78"
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Moore's
professional career began after he served three years in the Army's
elite 101st Airborne Division. During the early 1970s Moore taught
painting and drawing at Cuyahoga Community College, while pursuing
his bachelor's and master's degrees in fine arts at Kent State University.
From 1974 to 1885 Moore worked as an assistant curator and instructor
in the education department of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Moving
to New York, he held positions as adjunct professor at Queens College,
City University of New York, and Parsons School of Design. From
1994 to 2004 he was senior visiting artist at Skidmore College in
Saratoga Springs, New York, and was also an artist in residence
at the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the
Cleveland Institute of Art and the Rhode Island School of Design.
A
trip to Italy in 1990 sent his work in a new direction. Awed by
the soaring spirituality of the architecture, monumental altarpieces
and Renaissance frescos, Moore began to move away from the horizontality
of the landscape" to a vertical format, with a new feeling
of movement. Eyes" and other figurative shapes began
turning up in his work, and his ubiquitous black ovoid shapes were
joined by opalescent white ovals suggestive of mirrors, a favorite
device of European vanitas paintings. They signified something
very different in African culture, where mirrors were frequently
used to seal cavities hollowed out of wooden sculptures, as
Charlotte Kotik, curator of contemporary art at the Brooklyn Museum,
noted à propos of her 1996 show of Moore's new work. These
cavities, Kotik pointed out, held magical substances believed to
have the power to protect or heal.

Untitled
1999
Oil on canvas
80" x 67"
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Untitled
1999
Oil on canvas
80" x 67"
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In
Moore's paintings, the mirrors were blind and empty, or sometimes
barely there, perhaps signaling the deprivation of his African and
African-American heritage that had marked his early education. And
the smaller ovals, he has said, refer to an African custom passed
down by African Americans, in which an egg was placed over the door
to alleviate the pain of a child who is cutting teeth. Only
after learning about this tradition in 1991, Marianne Doezema,
curator of the 1996 traveling exhibition, Painting Abstract,
noted in the show's catalogue, did Moore remember that his
own grandmother had placed an egg in a sock and nailed it over the
doorway of teething children in the family.
Interestingly,
black has long been Moore's favorite color, and in his hands, it
becomes something subtle and interesting. His hard-edged black ovals,
often floating in or over a fluid sea of blues and grays, are beautiful
and compelling presences (Kotik) that usually dominate the
composition. They convey a wide range of moods and meanings. In
the enigmatic Two Blacks (1990), where two clusters of black
ovoid shapes seem to be huddling in the foreground, two small black
ovals adrift in a gray stormy sea seem farther away, perhaps meant
to evoke the bodies of countless African slaves buried at sea during
the crossing to America. Does the title of the painting refer to
poignant human experience or to a purely formal concern (a close
examination, Doezema notes, reveals two distinctly different black
pigments, one glossy and one matte)? Or both? It is part of the
richness of John Moore's work that it yields to no pat interpretations.
text
by
Dennis
J. Dooley
1986
Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Spring
2004
http://johnlmoore.net/
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