John Moore (painter)
John Moore (born 1941) is an American contemporary realist painter. His art has focused on studio interiors, still lifes, and in his best-known work, cityscapes and the American post-industrial landscape of dilapidated mill towns and factories. He emerged in the early 1970s amid a resurgence of representational work, appearing in many surveys and critical examinations that helped define new modes of American realism. While the highly detailed nature of his work evokes that movement, it diverges from approaches such as photorealism in its social concern, painterly handling and composite compositions, which distill direct observation, sketches, memories and photographs of multiple sites and views into re-imagined but believable scenes. Curator John Stomberg wrote of these constructed worlds: "The image he creates is only real in the painting, yet all the parts do have their origins in the observable world. Therein lies the eerie potency of Moore's vision—its plausibility. He is more of a spectacular fabulist than a realist."
John Moore | |
---|---|
Born | 1941 St. Louis, Missouri, US |
Education | Ranken Technical College, Washington University in St. Louis, Yale University |
Known for | Painting, drawing |
Style | Realism |
Spouse | Sandra Moore |
Awards | American Academy of Arts and Letters, National Academy of Design, National Endowment for the Arts |
Moore has been recognized by the American Academy of Arts and Letters and National Academy of Design and has exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. His work belongs to the public collections of those four museums, among others. He lives and works in Belfast, Maine with his wife Sandra, and is Professor Emeritus of Fine Arts of the University of Pennsylvania.