Andrew Moore "Elegies for Empire"

Queens Museum of Art

poster for Andrew Moore "Elegies for Empire"

This event has ended.

Eight works, four each from the photographic series Inside Havana (1998-2002) and Russia: Beyond Utopia (2000-2004), are brought together here to provide context for Detroit Disassembled: Photographs by Andrew Moore, organized by the Akron Art Museum, on the first floor. Moore uses 8×10 and 4×5 view cameras to mix picture-making and story-telling into atmospheric images which contain layers of time. Symbols of twentieth-century empires coexist with icons of those that came before, as in Green Trucks White Nights, 2002, in which a military installation on the Solovki archipelago abuts a Russian Orthodox monastery used as a prison by both the czars and the Soviet regime. Similarly, in El Almendron, 1998, the American and Spanish spheres of influence within Cuba’s own still-extant Communist regime take the form of a red 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air parked at a crumbling Moorish Art Nouveau townhouse. (In this picture, Moore points out visual sympathies between the design of the house and the car-like all those preserved from the 1950s, referred to as an “almond” because of its distinctive curves.) Although made almost a decade earlier, the Russian and Cuban pictures predict Moore’s engagement with Detroit, also a symbol of a mighty power over which time and nature have reasserted themselves in a potent mix of horror and beauty.

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Schedule

from August 28, 2011 to January 15, 2012

Opening Reception on 2011-09-18 from 15:00 to 18:00

Artist(s)

Andrew Moore

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