Monthly Archives: October 2025

Mark Moore Fine Art presents “Familiar”—an exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition by Heidi Schwegler

Heidi Schwegler
Familiar, 2025 
43.5 x 33.5 x 33.5 inches
Unique digital print, resin, steel, paint

Heidi Schwegler
Familiar (Lizard), 2025 
48 x 57 x 20 inches
Unique digital print and paint

✨ Mark Moore Fine Art presents “Familiar”—an exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition by Heidi Schwegler! ✨

Blending found objects with traditional sculpture, Heidi draws inspiration from her own story of resilience—growing up with severe lazy eye and learning the power of transformation. In this new work, she sculpts her “familiar”: a personal alter ego born from the spirits of the desert—coyote, mountain lion, and roadrunner—woven together with cholla and Mojave relics. Each piece is a tribute to survival, adaptation, and the wild beauty of the desert.

About Heidi: She transforms urban and desert fragments into striking works using glass, gold, and silver. Founder of Yucca Valley Material Lab, her art is part of collections at Portland Art Museum, Laguna Art Museum, Schneider Museum, Crocker Museum, and the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation.

Don’t miss this captivating online show at this link attached: https://bit.ly/47Gnlii

#HeidiSchwegler #FamiliarExhibition #MarkMooreFineArt #NewExhibition

Mark Moore Fine Art is pleased to announce the acquisition of work by artist KARA MARIA by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Kara Maria

At Sight of Sun (lark bunting), 2022

Color lithograph

30 × 22 in | 76.2 × 55.9 cm

Edition of 30
COLLECTION OF THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS HOUSTON
 

Mark Moore Fine Art and the artist are pleased to announce the acquisition of At Sight of Sun (lark bunting), 2022
 by artist KARA MARIA by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston for the Permanent Collection. 

Kara Maria produces paintings and work on paper that reflect on political themes such as feminism, war, and the environment. She borrows from the broad vocabulary of contemporary painting; blending geometric shapes, vivid hues, and abstract marks, with representational elements.

Maria received her BA and MFA from the University of California, Berkeley. She has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States at venues including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University; the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston, Texas; the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art; and the Katonah Museum of Art in New York; among others.

In 2016, Maria’s work was featured in a solo exhibition, Head Over Heels, at the University Art Gallery at California State University, Chico, which included an accompanying monograph. Her work has garnered critical attention in the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, and Art in America. Maria has completed residencies at the Montalvo Arts Center, Recology Artist in Residence Program, Djerassi Resident Artists Program, and at the de Young’s Artist Studio. She is recipient of multiple awards and honors, including a grant from Artadia and an Eisner Prize in Art from the University of California, Berkeley. Maria lives and works in San Francisco.

With its encyclopedic collection and an exciting schedule of international loan exhibitions and award-winning programs, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston is one of the premier destinations in the United States for art lovers. Established in 1900, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston’s collection numbers nearly 70,000 works and embraces the art of antiquity to the present.The collecting department of modern and contemporary art has grown to more than 1,400 objects spanning six continents. Major figures in the evolution Modern and Contemporary art, with a particular emphasis on the progress of abstraction, are represented across the 20th century and into the 21st and include works by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Piet Mondrian. The Surrealist era is introduced with works by Max Ernst, Alberto Giacometti, Roberto Matta, Joan Miró, and Yves Tanguy. Postwar European artists in the collection range from Pierre Alechinsky, Anthony Caro, Niki de Saint-Phalle, and Jean Tinguely to Rebecca Horn, Anselm Kiefer, Giuseppe Penone, and Gerhard Richter. Collecting in the new millennium has opened up new avenues of exploration, from the light-based works of James Turrell, Jennifer Steinkamp, and Bill Viola to artists who challenge accepted art-historical narratives, including Nan Goldin, Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Do Ho Suh, and Fred Wilson.

#markmoorefineart #markmooregallery #karamaria #artexhibition #artshow #painting #contemporarypainting #contemporaryart #artcollector #artcurator #artconsultant #artadvisor #abstractart #abstractpainting #laartist

Mark Moore Fine Art proudly presents “Refractions: L.A. Art in the Eighties and Nineties,” showcasing influential early works by Los Angeles legends Peter Alexander, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Eric Orr, and Helen Pashgian

Peter Alexander, “Universal X”, 1992

Mark Moore Fine Art proudly presents “Refractions: L.A. Art in the Eighties and Nineties,” showcasing influential early works by Los Angeles legends Peter Alexander, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Eric Orr, and Helen Pashgian.

By the ’80s and ’90s, L.A. became an experimental hub—where light, surface, and perception intertwined in bold new ways. Bell explored glass and reflection; Alexander created resin forms inspired by color and city haze; Bengston infused painting with California’s vibrant energy; Pashgian crafted luminous sculptures; and Orr’s works, infused with elements of alchemy and spirituality, played with presence and infinity.

Experience a moment in L.A. art history defined by experimentation, reflection, and the evolving nature of perception itself.

See the full exhibition: https://bit.ly/467a4hW

#LosAngelesArt #Refractions #LightandSpace #MarkMooreFineArt #LAGallery

Joshua Dildine showcases his recent work in “Wooly Bugger” – an exclusive ARTSY online exhibition on view now!

Excited to announce: Joshua Dildine’s first ARTSY online exclusive in 5 years! 🎨 “Wooly Bugger” features 8 new works by this California-based painter, from vibrant canvases to mixed-media pieces on photographs.

In this series, Dildine blends found autobiographical photos with dynamic, gestural painting to explore memory, family, and the quirks of nostalgia. Using images from fly fishing trips, he layers brushwork, saturated color, and digital (even AI) manipulations to disrupt and reinvent the original photos—blurring the boundaries between photography, painting, and abstraction.

Dive into the turbulence, clarity, and visual flux in these pieces that capture the ever-changing experience of wading through water and memory.

Now live on ARTSY—view the exhibition: https://bit.ly/4nZ9SZ6

About the artist: Dildine earned his MFA from Claremont Graduate University and has exhibited across California and beyond. His work is held in multiple museum collections.

#JoshuaDildine #WoolyBugger #MarkMooreFineArt #artsy #contemporaryart #newexhibition

Now Live on Artsy: ‘WALLFLOWER’ by Amy Elkins!

Now Live on Artsy: ‘WALLFLOWER’ by Amy Elkins!

Mark Moore Fine Art is excited to present an exclusive online exhibition of Amy Elkins’ powerful series WALLFLOWER—on view through Nov 9, 2025.

Elkins’ striking portraits dive deep into masculinity, gender identity, and vulnerability, challenging stereotypes and rewriting the male gaze. From intimate Brooklyn-based portraits to raw, honest images of masculine-identified individuals across Georgia, WALLFLOWER & WALLFLOWER II offer a new perspective on identity and beauty.

Amy Elkins is internationally acclaimed, recently recognized with the Fleishhacker Eureka Fellowship + Kala Media Arts Fellowship.

Explore the exhibition, experience the art ➡️ https://bit.ly/47sxEYO

#AmyElkins #Wallflower #PhotographyExhibition #Artsy #MarkMooreFineArt #GenderIdentity #Masculinity #ContemporaryArt

BREAKING THE CODE: A New Biographical Documentary Film About The Life Of Artist Vernon Fisher

BREAKING THE CODE: A New Biographical Documentary Film About The Life Of Artist Vernon Fisher

Best Historical Film, Dallas International Film Festival
Official Selection, Los Angeles Independent Film Festival
Official Selection, Thin Line Fest
Official Selection, Frame of Mind (PBS)

Prolepsis Pictures is proud to announce the World Premiere of “Breaking the Code”, a feature-length biographical documentary about the life of Fort Worth-based artist Vernon Fisher. We also plan to broadcast the film Texas-wide on PBS affiliate program Frame of Mind in October. 

 
Vernon Fisher has mounted major exhibitions at museums including the Smithsonian Institution, Guggenheim Museum and Museum of Modern Art in New York, among many others. He is the only Dallas-Fort Worth-born artist to receive a retrospective at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth — a space that has also hosted similar
exhibitions for artists including Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso.
 
More important than Fisher’s accomplishments, however, is the content of his art. Not only is he such a masterfully technical painter that viewers often mistake his chalkboard-style paintings as actually being made with chalk, but he is also renowned for the emotional, psychological and philosophical depth of his work.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE FILM WEBSITE WITH ALL UPCOMING SHOWINGS:

https://breakingthecodefilm.com

#markmoorefineart #vernonfisher #artist#art#modernart#contemporaryart#dailyart#instaart#instagood#contemporaryartist#kunst#artcollectors#artcollector#artconsultant#abstractartist #breakingthecode

Mark Moore Fine Art presents “Patterns of Landscape,” an exclusive ARTSY online exhibition by celebrated British artist Kim Rugg

Mark Moore Gallery presents “Patterns of Landscape,” an exclusive ARTSY online exhibition by celebrated British artist Kim Rugg.

Known for her meticulous craft, Rugg deconstructs and reconstructs items like newspapers, magazines, and maps, challenging how we receive and trust information. In this show, she reimagines borders and regions with precise hand-drawn cartography, highlighting how we perceive power and territory. Rugg’s playful yet thought-provoking work with newsprint and maps exposes the manipulative tactics found in everyday media.

Experience Kim Rugg’s art—equal parts wit and critique—online now! View the show: https://bit.ly/47dVB5o

Kim Rugg’s work appears in major museum collections worldwide. Based in London, she continues to redefine how we see the world. 

#KimRugg #PatternsofLandscape #ContemporaryArt #OnlineExhibition #MarkMooreGallery #ARTSY

Mark Moore Fine Art presents “Between Quiet and Bold,” an exclusive online exhibition by Rebekah Andrade – On View Now!

✨ Now Live on ARTSY! ✨

Mark Moore Fine Art presents “Between Quiet and Bold,” an exclusive online exhibition by Rebekah Andrade. Dive into Andrade’s latest body of work—a vibrant exploration of presence and balance through layered abstraction.

Experience buoyant fields of green, blue, and pink, interwoven with expressive marks that create moments of tension and release. With acrylic and pastel on paper, Rebekah masterfully layers color and gesture, inviting you to slow down and discover both the details and atmosphere within each piece.

This collection is all about finding clarity, resonance, and quiet joy in the balance between structure and surrender.

Don’t miss it—see the full show now! ⬇️

🔗 VIEW THE EXHIBITION: https://bit.ly/3IqZytR

#RebekahAndrade #ArtExhibition #MarkMooreFineArt #BetweenQuietAndBold #ArtsyExhibit #ContemporaryArt #AbstractArt

Mark Moore Fine Art is pleased to announce the acquisition of a major video work by artist collective OKAY MOUNTAIN by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston for their Permanent Collection

Okay Mountain
Water, Water, Everywhere So Let’s All Have a Drink, 2010
Single channel video, 28min
COLLECTION OF THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS HOUSTON

Mark Moore Fine Art and the artist are pleased to announce the acquisition of a major video work by artist collective OKAY MOUNTAIN by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston for the Permanent Collection. 

Okay Mountain is a nine member artist collective based in Austin, Texas. Formed in 2006 as an artist-run alternative gallery space, the group has exhibited their drawing, video, sound, and performance projects throughout the United States and in Mexico City, and has been widely recognized for its “inventive construction, loving attention to detail and keen-eyed connoisseurship.” Okay Mountain repackages, reconstitutes, and rekindles our consumerist desires with a sardonic edge. Their installations and multi-media assemblage works mimic the stock vernacular of our communal materialism, yet tweak them just enough to reveal our superficial insecurities and convictions. While most artists are alumni of the University of Texas at Austin (TX), others are graduates of University of California Los Angeles (CA), Rhode Island School of Design (RI), and the University of Kansas (KS). Institutional exhibitions have included those at the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston (TX), Austin Museum of Art (TX), McNay Art Museum (TX), Arthouse (TX), University of Tennessee, Chattanooga (TN), and the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum (MA). Their work is included in the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Art Houston (TX), Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (CT), McNay Museum of Art (TX), Orange County Museum of Art (CA), Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (CA), Santa Barabara Museum of Art (CA), and Vanderbilt University (TN). 

Water, Water, Everywhere So Let’s All Have a Drink takes the visual language of late-night television as its basic formal premise. The video, a quick succession of clips meant to invoke the activity of channel surfing, recreates the aesthetic and embodied experience of mindlessly scanning TV. First exhibited at the Austin Museum of Art, the work was projected onto a larger-than-life sculpture of a television set. Since then it has been screened at Prospect 1.5 in New Orleans, the Heuser Art Center, and the Dallas Biennale. Some of the tropes that Water, Water lampoons and celebrates, include, low-budget infomercials, how-to programs, home-shopping networks, sitcoms, and local news programming. The resulting visual assemblage attempts to make sense out of the overwhelming disconnection brought about by contemporary media’s image factory.

 WATCH THIS VIDEO HERE 

With its encyclopedic collection and an exciting schedule of international loan exhibitions and award-winning programs, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston is one of the premier destinations in the United States for art lovers. Established in 1900, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston’s collection numbers nearly 70,000 works and embraces the art of antiquity to the present.

The collecting department of modern and contemporary art has grown to more than 1,400 objects spanning six continents. Major figures in the evolution Modern and Contemporary art, with a particular emphasis on the progress of abstraction, are represented across the 20th century and into the 21st and include works by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Piet Mondrian. The Surrealist era is introduced with works by Max Ernst, Alberto Giacometti, Roberto Matta, Joan Miró, and Yves Tanguy. Postwar European artists in the collection range from Pierre Alechinsky, Anthony Caro, Niki de Saint-Phalle, and Jean Tinguely to Rebecca Horn, Anselm Kiefer, Giuseppe Penone, and Gerhard Richter. Collecting in the new millennium has opened up new avenues of exploration, from the light-based works of James Turrell, Jennifer Steinkamp, and Bill Viola to artists who challenge accepted art-historical narratives, including Nan Goldin, Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Do Ho Suh, and Fred Wilson.

#markmoorefineart #markmooregallery #okaymountainl #artexhibition #artshow #painting #contemporarypainting #contemporaryart #artcollector #artcurator #artconsultant #artadvisor #abstractart #abstractpainting #laartist

Mark Moore Fine Art proudly presents “Refractions: L.A. Art in the Eighties and Nineties,” showcasing influential early works by Los Angeles legends Peter Alexander, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Eric Orr, and Helen Pashgian

Larry Bell, “MELINBK”, 1984

Mark Moore Fine Art proudly presents “Refractions: L.A. Art in the Eighties and Nineties,” showcasing influential early works by Los Angeles legends Peter Alexander, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Eric Orr, and Helen Pashgian.

By the ’80s and ’90s, L.A. became an experimental hub—where light, surface, and perception intertwined in bold new ways. Bell explored glass and reflection; Alexander created resin forms inspired by color and city haze; Bengston infused painting with California’s vibrant energy; Pashgian crafted luminous sculptures; and Orr’s works, infused with elements of alchemy and spirituality, played with presence and infinity.

Experience a moment in L.A. art history defined by experimentation, reflection, and the evolving nature of perception itself.

See the full exhibition: https://bit.ly/467a4hW

#LosAngelesArt #Refractions #LightandSpace #MarkMooreFineArt #LAGallery