Monday, June 16, 2008
CineVegas Film Festival...Ed Moses to appear at panel on Cool School documentary!
Ed Moses, a celebrated American painter born in Long Beach in 1926, is appearing for a panel discussion after a screening of the documentary - "The Cool School" - tomorrow at the CineVegas Film Festival.
"The Cool School" documents the scene at the legendary Ferus Gallery which exhibited a handful of artists who rose up from the dynamic Los Angeles art scene to become a few of the most celebrated artists in America.
The doc includes raw footage from original art openings and outspoken interviews from a cross-section of visionary artists.
Festival organizers promise that the "Cool School" will provide a solid foundation from which to fathom the distinctive creative "style" conjured up by the legendary gallery artists.
In addition, there will be a lot of behind-the-scenes "dirt" offered up on a silver platter to titillate the curious.
Ed Moses has savored a fifty-year career as a noted non-objective and abstract artist.
He first unveiled his work in 1949 and was part of the original group of artists from the Ferus Gallery who exhibited their work in 1957.
Later, Moses’s career was the subject of a major retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art in 1996.
"I'm a painter, inventive, activated. An abstract painting is not a reference; it's not a picture; it's a perception of the painting. It goes back to Barnett Newman's Who's Afraid of Red, Yellow, and Blue?"
Art historians have argued that his paintings are important for a myriad of reasons.
"They are a conceptual ideal of an abstract painting, existing on a two-dimensional plane. They are not painterly paintings, not painted by hand. They are the physical evidence of an abstract painting as a physical phenomenon. They have no reference nor do they exist as a referent to anything other than how they visually exist.
A number of film buffs at the CineVegas Film Festival were quite surprised to happen across the unassuming Moses - an easy-going down-to-earth gent - as he mixed and mingled in the lounge at the Palms Hotel.
In part, his style is made recognizable by virtue of the fact he seldom uses a brush - instead - preferring to stain, knife, splash and facilitate tape and snap lines to achieve straight lines.
He is also known for a series of coastal architectural drawings.
For the most part, the innovative painter was inclined to exhaustively experiment with his materials.
In fact, Moses has been critically acclaimed for his bold composition and innovation.
In his senior years, he remains a high-profile fixture on the Los Angeles art scene, and is respected for his inventiveness as an artist and his attentiveness to new developments in contemporary art.
The artwork of Ed Moses has appeared in numerous exhibitions around the world.
His coveted pieces are housed in prestigious collections at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Art Institute of Chicago, the Menil Foundation, the Museum of Modern Art, The Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, among others.
Catch him if you can at the CineVegas film festival.
Aristophanes once said:
"Let each man exercise the art he knows."
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