Andrew Moore: Photographs
November 30, 2006- January 27, 2007
535 W 22nd St
The
Yancey Richardson Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of recent
photographs by
Andrew Moore. Taken between 2002 and 2006 in Russia,
Sweden, Vietnam, North Dakota and Asbury Park, New Jersey, these works
represent a move away from Moore’s previous focus on the architecture of a
single geographical location in favor of an interest in the grandly scaled inhabited
landscape. Whereas Moore has previously used architecture as a way to
explore themes of history and culture, in his landscapes, Moore contemplates the
existence of man in the larger world of a particular natural environment.
In addition Moore has increasingly applied the themes and motifs of the tradition
of painting to the creation of his photographic images. Moore's Sea of Fog is a
direct reference to Caspar David Friedrich’s iconic Wanderer Above a Sea of
Fog. In Casino Rooftop Moore pays homage to the American trompe l’oeil
painter John F. Peto a master of illusion who transformed paint into reality. In
response, Moore turns the realism of photography into what seems at first glance
a painting. Motherland, Kiev and Round Up #2, North Dakota are both ritualized
spaces where the epic scale and harmonized landscape suggest an unreal
sense of place. The former draws upon the stylized works of anonymous soviet
propaganda; the latter on the tradition of 19th century painters of the American
west. Fishing Village, White Sea references 17th century Dutch landscapes, in
particular the moody combination of melancholy found in the paintings of Jakob
van Ruisdael.
In 2004, Moore received a commission from The Public Art Fund to photograph
Governor’s Island. In 2005 the Queens Museum, the Museum of the City of New
York and Columbia University’s Wallach Art Gallery commissioned a series of
photographs of the public works of Robert Moses to be exhibited in at all three
institutions in January 2007 and published in a book by Abrams. Earlier projects
by Moore have focused on Russia, Havana, Sarajevo and the old theatres of
42nd Street in New York.
Moore was educated at Princeton University where he is now an adjunct
professor. With the director John Walker, Moore produced the film How to Draw
a Bunny, a documentary on the artist Ray Johnson which won a Special Jury
Prize at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival. Two monographs, Inside Havana and
Russia have been published by Chronicle Books. A mid-career retrospective is s
currently on view at Dartmouth University accompanied by a catalogue with
essay by Nancy Princenthal. Moore’s photographs have been acquired by
numerous major museums including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the
Canadian Center for Architecture, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the San
Francisco Museum of Art, and the International Center of Photography.
Art Reviews of Andrew Moore: Photographs
New York Times January 12, 2007 | | Martha Schwendener | | "...At the same time, Mr. Moore borrows heavily from the bag of tricks employed by conceptual photographers like Andreas Gursky and Jeff Wall. His chromogenic prints mimic the scale of easel painting and the color saturation of commercial photography. He is also not averse to digitally manipulating his images...." |
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Yancey Richardson Gallery | | Address | 535 W 22nd St, 3rd Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 646-230-9610 | | Fax | 646-230-6131 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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