Description:

Diana Moore (American, b.1946) "Head of Justice #1," 1990. Cast concrete with custom metal stand. Provenance: The Artist; Allan Stone Gallery, New York. Exhibited: New Jersey, Jersey City Museum, June - August, 1992. New York, Allan Stone Projects, Diana Moore: Classical Continuum, June 23 - August 10, 2018. Literature: Parks, John A. "Modern Sculpture from Ancient Sources," American Artist Magazine, October 1996, p. 42 -47, illus. p. 43. Zimmer, William. "Concrete Statuary, Charcoal on Paper," The New York Times, June 21, 1992. p. 10. Size: 10'' x 8.5'' x 7.25'' (25 x 22 x 18 cm). Height on stand: 14" (36 cm). DIANA MOORE (b. 1946, Norfolk, VA) Diana Moore's figurative sculptures are inspired by the artistic traditions of Etruscan, Greek, Egyptian and Cambodian cultures. Working primarily in concrete, Moore pays homage to the ancient Romans, who used the medium for its strengthening properties in their architecture. The frontal positioning of her portraits and life-size figures reflect strength and resilience, while the organic quality of their medium lends an ambiguity to their ethnicity and gender. Combining a contemporary aesthetic with historic traditions, Moore succeeds in highlighting a universality and timelessness in her powerful works. Diana Moore was born in 1946 in Norfolk, Virginia. She attended Northern Illinois University and the University of Iowa. In 2013, she was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Fresno Art Museum in California. Moore's work has also been exhibited at the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art; the American Institute of Architecture, Washington, DC; the Chicago Athenaeum Museum of Architecture and Design; the National Building Museum, Washington, DC; the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia; and the Triennale Design Museum, Milan, Italy, among others. Several of Moore's monumental depictions of Justice were commissioned by the United States General Services Administration for the Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Building and U.S Courthouse in Newark, New Jersey in 1994; the Warren B. Rudmen U.S Courthouse in Concord, New Hampshire in 1997; and the John M. Shaw U.S. Courthouse in Lafayette, Louisiana in 1999. The artist lives and works in Connecticut

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