Tag Archives: exhibition

Clay Johnson’s STRATA PAINTINGS Exclusive Online ARTSY Exhibition Set to Open August 1st

Experience a unique art experience as Mark Moore Fine Art presents Clay Johnson‘s “Strata Paintings” exclusive ARTSY online exhibition. Explore the layers of memory and perception in Johnson’s art, reflecting the complex editing process of the landscape of our minds.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/3XHIipr

Clay Johnson began work on his “Strata Series” shortly after relocating to Wyoming, and, while non-objective in nature, the paintings convey a sense of the wide open landscape of the American west.

“I think of myself as a collage artist. I’m cutting and pasting memories of my life.”

—Spalding Gray

When we think of past experiences, places we’ve visited, or people we’ve known, we’re not drawing on a unified continuum of experience. Rather these entities exist in our memories as collections of moments, collaged together and plastered with a label—School, Friend, Work. Whether very general (e.g., “Human”) or quite specific (“Stephen”), these concepts live in the mind as aggregations of snapshots, pasted together in no particular order, the most recent blended with the most distant (and all of the others) to create a representation of whatever the thing, place, person, or idea may be.

The Strata Paintings involve a kind of editing that’s similar to what our brains do in constructing images of the people and things that we remember. I layer many sections over one another, keeping the parts that I like and painting over the less memorable elements, or modifying them so that they fit with my idea of what the whole is (or should be). Just as our brains forget many unremarkable experiences, my paintings contain lots of layers beneath the visible surface, which nevertheless influence their perception in subtle ways.

Clay Johnson was born in Durham, North Carolina, where he studied art and art history at Duke University, receiving a B.A. degree in 1985. He then worked for several years as assistant to the painter Robert Natkin in Connecticut and New York City. He began showing paintings from his first series of mature work in 1998, and has since exhibited in galleries across the United States and in Europe. His work is represented in collections around the world.

#ClayJohnson #StrataPaintings #MarkMooreFineArt #ARTSY #Memory #Perception #ArtExhibition

Clay Johnson’s STRATA PAINTINGS Exclusive Online ARTSY Exhibition Set to Open August 1st

Experience a unique art experience as Mark Moore Fine Art presents Clay Johnson‘s “Strata Paintings” exclusive ARTSY online exhibition. Explore the layers of memory and perception in Johnson’s art, reflecting the complex editing process of the landscape of our minds.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/3XHIipr

Clay Johnson began work on his “Strata Series” shortly after relocating to Wyoming, and, while non-objective in nature, the paintings convey a sense of the wide open landscape of the American west.

“I think of myself as a collage artist. I’m cutting and pasting memories of my life.”

—Spalding Gray

When we think of past experiences, places we’ve visited, or people we’ve known, we’re not drawing on a unified continuum of experience. Rather these entities exist in our memories as collections of moments, collaged together and plastered with a label—School, Friend, Work. Whether very general (e.g., “Human”) or quite specific (“Stephen”), these concepts live in the mind as aggregations of snapshots, pasted together in no particular order, the most recent blended with the most distant (and all of the others) to create a representation of whatever the thing, place, person, or idea may be.

The Strata Paintings involve a kind of editing that’s similar to what our brains do in constructing images of the people and things that we remember. I layer many sections over one another, keeping the parts that I like and painting over the less memorable elements, or modifying them so that they fit with my idea of what the whole is (or should be). Just as our brains forget many unremarkable experiences, my paintings contain lots of layers beneath the visible surface, which nevertheless influence their perception in subtle ways.

Clay Johnson was born in Durham, North Carolina, where he studied art and art history at Duke University, receiving a B.A. degree in 1985. He then worked for several years as assistant to the painter Robert Natkin in Connecticut and New York City. He began showing paintings from his first series of mature work in 1998, and has since exhibited in galleries across the United States and in Europe. His work is represented in collections around the world.

#ClayJohnson #StrataPaintings #MarkMooreFineArt #ARTSY #Memory #Perception #ArtExhibition

Clay Johnson’s STRATA PAINTINGS Exclusive Online ARTSY Exhibition Set to Open August 1st

Experience a unique art experience as Mark Moore Fine Art presents Clay Johnson‘s “Strata Paintings” exclusive ARTSY online exhibition. Explore the layers of memory and perception in Johnson’s art, reflecting the complex editing process of the landscape of our minds.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/3XHIipr

Clay Johnson began work on his “Strata Series” shortly after relocating to Wyoming, and, while non-objective in nature, the paintings convey a sense of the wide open landscape of the American west.

“I think of myself as a collage artist. I’m cutting and pasting memories of my life.”

—Spalding Gray

When we think of past experiences, places we’ve visited, or people we’ve known, we’re not drawing on a unified continuum of experience. Rather these entities exist in our memories as collections of moments, collaged together and plastered with a label—School, Friend, Work. Whether very general (e.g., “Human”) or quite specific (“Stephen”), these concepts live in the mind as aggregations of snapshots, pasted together in no particular order, the most recent blended with the most distant (and all of the others) to create a representation of whatever the thing, place, person, or idea may be.

The Strata Paintings involve a kind of editing that’s similar to what our brains do in constructing images of the people and things that we remember. I layer many sections over one another, keeping the parts that I like and painting over the less memorable elements, or modifying them so that they fit with my idea of what the whole is (or should be). Just as our brains forget many unremarkable experiences, my paintings contain lots of layers beneath the visible surface, which nevertheless influence their perception in subtle ways.

Clay Johnson was born in Durham, North Carolina, where he studied art and art history at Duke University, receiving a B.A. degree in 1985. He then worked for several years as assistant to the painter Robert Natkin in Connecticut and New York City. He began showing paintings from his first series of mature work in 1998, and has since exhibited in galleries across the United States and in Europe. His work is represented in collections around the world.

#ClayJohnson #StrataPaintings #MarkMooreFineArt #ARTSY #Memory #Perception #ArtExhibition

Clay Johnson’s STRATA PAINTINGS Exclusive Online ARTSY Exhibition Set to Open August 1st

Experience a unique art experience as Mark Moore Fine Art presents Clay Johnson‘s “Strata Paintings” exclusive ARTSY online exhibition. Explore the layers of memory and perception in Johnson’s art, reflecting the complex editing process of the landscape of our minds.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/3XHIipr

Clay Johnson began work on his “Strata Series” shortly after relocating to Wyoming, and, while non-objective in nature, the paintings convey a sense of the wide open landscape of the American west.

“I think of myself as a collage artist. I’m cutting and pasting memories of my life.”

—Spalding Gray

When we think of past experiences, places we’ve visited, or people we’ve known, we’re not drawing on a unified continuum of experience. Rather these entities exist in our memories as collections of moments, collaged together and plastered with a label—School, Friend, Work. Whether very general (e.g., “Human”) or quite specific (“Stephen”), these concepts live in the mind as aggregations of snapshots, pasted together in no particular order, the most recent blended with the most distant (and all of the others) to create a representation of whatever the thing, place, person, or idea may be.

The Strata Paintings involve a kind of editing that’s similar to what our brains do in constructing images of the people and things that we remember. I layer many sections over one another, keeping the parts that I like and painting over the less memorable elements, or modifying them so that they fit with my idea of what the whole is (or should be). Just as our brains forget many unremarkable experiences, my paintings contain lots of layers beneath the visible surface, which nevertheless influence their perception in subtle ways.

Clay Johnson was born in Durham, North Carolina, where he studied art and art history at Duke University, receiving a B.A. degree in 1985. He then worked for several years as assistant to the painter Robert Natkin in Connecticut and New York City. He began showing paintings from his first series of mature work in 1998, and has since exhibited in galleries across the United States and in Europe. His work is represented in collections around the world.

#ClayJohnson #StrataPaintings #MarkMooreFineArt #ARTSY #Memory #Perception #ArtExhibition

Clay Johnson’s STRATA PAINTINGS Exclusive Online ARTSY Exhibition Set to Open August 1st

Experience a unique art experience as Mark Moore Fine Art presents Clay Johnson‘s “Strata Paintings” exclusive ARTSY online exhibition. Explore the layers of memory and perception in Johnson’s art, reflecting the complex editing process of the landscape of our minds.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/3XHIipr

Clay Johnson began work on his “Strata Series” shortly after relocating to Wyoming, and, while non-objective in nature, the paintings convey a sense of the wide open landscape of the American west.

“I think of myself as a collage artist. I’m cutting and pasting memories of my life.”

—Spalding Gray

When we think of past experiences, places we’ve visited, or people we’ve known, we’re not drawing on a unified continuum of experience. Rather these entities exist in our memories as collections of moments, collaged together and plastered with a label—School, Friend, Work. Whether very general (e.g., “Human”) or quite specific (“Stephen”), these concepts live in the mind as aggregations of snapshots, pasted together in no particular order, the most recent blended with the most distant (and all of the others) to create a representation of whatever the thing, place, person, or idea may be.

The Strata Paintings involve a kind of editing that’s similar to what our brains do in constructing images of the people and things that we remember. I layer many sections over one another, keeping the parts that I like and painting over the less memorable elements, or modifying them so that they fit with my idea of what the whole is (or should be). Just as our brains forget many unremarkable experiences, my paintings contain lots of layers beneath the visible surface, which nevertheless influence their perception in subtle ways.

Clay Johnson was born in Durham, North Carolina, where he studied art and art history at Duke University, receiving a B.A. degree in 1985. He then worked for several years as assistant to the painter Robert Natkin in Connecticut and New York City. He began showing paintings from his first series of mature work in 1998, and has since exhibited in galleries across the United States and in Europe. His work is represented in collections around the world.

#ClayJohnson #StrataPaintings #MarkMooreFineArt #ARTSY #Memory #Perception #ArtExhibition

Closing Sunday: MEHGAN SMYTHE “RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE” | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

We are proud to present the new ceramic works of Meghan Smythe in her exclusive ARTSY exhibition, “Recent Explorations in Ceramic Sculpture”. Through her use of traditional monument format, Smythe captures the delicate balance between intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/48ZMQcJ

Using a traditional sculptural format (the monument), Meghan Smythe captures contradicting extremes within human gesture: intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness, or the lewd and tender. In her attempt to achieve an “elegant vulgarity,” she encapsulates moments that define our mortality in unanticipated ways; oftentimes toeing the delicate line between erotic and macabre tendencies that give way to life, and ultimately death. Glass, ceramic, and concrete are woven together in an elaborate, orgy-like web of body parts and organic artifacts, as if suddenly cast with Pompeii-like circumstances. Like excavated antiquities or fossils, Smythe’s ceramic compositions allude to the cyclical nature of civilization – a dramedy in which all of the players are subject to conquest and demise.

Smythe (b. 1984, Kingston, ON) received her MFA from the Alfred University School of Art and Design (NY). Her work has been shown at the Arizona State University Art Museum (AZ) and the Gardiner Museum, Toronto (ON). She was the Visiting Artist in Residence at California State University, Long Beach (CA) from 2012-2014.

For more information or additional press materials, please visit: www.markmoorefineart.com

#contemporaryart#abstractart#artcurator#artstudio#studioview#artist#art#modernart#contemporaryart#dailyart#instaart#instagood#contemporaryartist#kunst#artcollectors #markmoorefineart #meghansmythe

Mark Moore Fine Art Presents ULTRA 24 – An Exclusive ARTSY Online Group Exhibition

Daniel DuFord “Summer Reverie” 2022

Mark Moore Fine Art is excited to present “ULTRA 24“, a summer group exhibition featuring new work from a diverse group of gallery artists. This exhibition will continue the tradition of the gallery’s “Ultrasonic” Group Survey, dating back to the “Ultrasonic International” Exhibition in 2006. The show will open on June 6th and continue through September 15, 2024.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/3V1FS3o

ULTRA 24” will feature one new work from virtually all the gallery’s artists, showcasing the wealth of talent represented by the gallery. The exhibition will include a range of mediums and techniques, showcasing the diversity of styles and interests of the artists. Some of the featured highlights include an important new wall work by Yoram Wolberger, a major new outdoor sculpture by Tim Bavington, and a new fantasy TV sitcom blueprint work by Mark Bennett.

Artists included in this exhibition are Rebekah Andrade; Michael Batty; Tim Bavington; Mark Bennett; Alex Blau; Ken Craft; Daniel Duford; Dennis Ekstedt; Jimi Gleason; Jennifer Gunlock; Julie Heffernan; Clay Johnson; David Klamen; Kara Maria; Zemer Peled; Jeanne Quinn; David Rathman; Kim Rugg; Jason Salavon; Allison Schulnik; Heidi Schwegler, Robert Standish; Lisa Stefanelli; Ben Weiner; and Yoram Wolberger.

“We are thrilled to bring this group exhibition to our audience,” says Gallery Director Mark Moore. “It’s a fantastic opportunity to see the latest work from our talented artists and get a taste of the diverse range of mediums and techniques they are exploring.”

“ULTRA 24” continues the gallery’s long-standing tradition of showcasing the most innovative and cutting-edge work in the contemporary art world. Since its inception in 1983, Mark Moore Fine Art has been dedicated to promoting emerging and established artists and providing a platform for their work to be recognized and appreciated by a wider audience.

#MarkMooreFineArt #Ultra24 #SummerExhibition #CuttingEdgeArt #ContemporaryArt #NewArtists #ArtShow #SaveTheDate #2024ArtScene

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

We are proud to present the new ceramic works of Meghan Smythe in her exclusive ARTSY exhibition, “Recent Explorations in Ceramic Sculpture”. Through her use of traditional monument format, Smythe captures the delicate balance between intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/48ZMQcJ

Using a traditional sculptural format (the monument), Meghan Smythe captures contradicting extremes within human gesture: intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness, or the lewd and tender. In her attempt to achieve an “elegant vulgarity,” she encapsulates moments that define our mortality in unanticipated ways; oftentimes toeing the delicate line between erotic and macabre tendencies that give way to life, and ultimately death. Glass, ceramic, and concrete are woven together in an elaborate, orgy-like web of body parts and organic artifacts, as if suddenly cast with Pompeii-like circumstances. Like excavated antiquities or fossils, Smythe’s ceramic compositions allude to the cyclical nature of civilization – a dramedy in which all of the players are subject to conquest and demise.

Smythe (b. 1984, Kingston, ON) received her MFA from the Alfred University School of Art and Design (NY). Her work has been shown at the Arizona State University Art Museum (AZ) and the Gardiner Museum, Toronto (ON). She was the Visiting Artist in Residence at California State University, Long Beach (CA) from 2012-2014.

For more information or additional press materials, please visit: www.markmoorefineart.com

#contemporaryart#abstractart#artcurator#artstudio#studioview#artist#art#modernart#contemporaryart#dailyart#instaart#instagood#contemporaryartist#kunst#artcollectors #markmoorefineart #meghansmythe

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

We are proud to present the new ceramic works of Meghan Smythe in her exclusive ARTSY exhibition, “Recent Explorations in Ceramic Sculpture”. Through her use of traditional monument format, Smythe captures the delicate balance between intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/48ZMQcJ

Using a traditional sculptural format (the monument), Meghan Smythe captures contradicting extremes within human gesture: intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness, or the lewd and tender. In her attempt to achieve an “elegant vulgarity,” she encapsulates moments that define our mortality in unanticipated ways; oftentimes toeing the delicate line between erotic and macabre tendencies that give way to life, and ultimately death. Glass, ceramic, and concrete are woven together in an elaborate, orgy-like web of body parts and organic artifacts, as if suddenly cast with Pompeii-like circumstances. Like excavated antiquities or fossils, Smythe’s ceramic compositions allude to the cyclical nature of civilization – a dramedy in which all of the players are subject to conquest and demise.

Smythe (b. 1984, Kingston, ON) received her MFA from the Alfred University School of Art and Design (NY). Her work has been shown at the Arizona State University Art Museum (AZ) and the Gardiner Museum, Toronto (ON). She was the Visiting Artist in Residence at California State University, Long Beach (CA) from 2012-2014.

For more information or additional press materials, please visit: www.markmoorefineart.com

#contemporaryart#abstractart#artcurator#artstudio#studioview#artist#art#modernart#contemporaryart#dailyart#instaart#instagood#contemporaryartist#kunst#artcollectors #markmoorefineart #meghansmythe

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

MEHGAN SMYTHE: RECENT EXPLORATIONS IN CERAMIC SCULPTURE | An Exclusive ARTSY Online Exhibition On View Now

We are proud to present the new ceramic works of Meghan Smythe in her exclusive ARTSY exhibition, “Recent Explorations in Ceramic Sculpture”. Through her use of traditional monument format, Smythe captures the delicate balance between intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness.

VIEW THIS SHOW NOW AT: https://bit.ly/48ZMQcJ

Using a traditional sculptural format (the monument), Meghan Smythe captures contradicting extremes within human gesture: intimacy and brutality, beauty and ugliness, or the lewd and tender. In her attempt to achieve an “elegant vulgarity,” she encapsulates moments that define our mortality in unanticipated ways; oftentimes toeing the delicate line between erotic and macabre tendencies that give way to life, and ultimately death. Glass, ceramic, and concrete are woven together in an elaborate, orgy-like web of body parts and organic artifacts, as if suddenly cast with Pompeii-like circumstances. Like excavated antiquities or fossils, Smythe’s ceramic compositions allude to the cyclical nature of civilization – a dramedy in which all of the players are subject to conquest and demise.

Smythe (b. 1984, Kingston, ON) received her MFA from the Alfred University School of Art and Design (NY). Her work has been shown at the Arizona State University Art Museum (AZ) and the Gardiner Museum, Toronto (ON). She was the Visiting Artist in Residence at California State University, Long Beach (CA) from 2012-2014.

For more information or additional press materials, please visit: www.markmoorefineart.com

#contemporaryart#abstractart#artcurator#artstudio#studioview#artist#art#modernart#contemporaryart#dailyart#instaart#instagood#contemporaryartist#kunst#artcollectors #markmoorefineart #meghansmythe