Ed Moses (April 9, 1926 - ) is an American artist based in the Los Angeles area and considered one of the most innovative and central figures of postwar West Coast art.
Moses exhibited at the legendary Ferus Gallery in 1957 along with fellow prominent artist figures including Wallace Berman, Billy Al Bengston, Robert Irwin, Craig Kauffman, John Altoon,Larry Bell (artist) and Ed Ruscha. Over the next 5 or 6 decades, Moses would soar to prominence, gaining attention not only throughout Los Angeles and the United States, but internationally as well. Moses was the first to do so of his generation since John McLaughlin, Richard Diebenkorn and Sam Francis. While these artists developed a mature style, Moses has managed to resist any stylized approach and remain more experimental, playing to his curiosities by moving past what he already knows.
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Ed Moses’ mother, Olivia Branco, separated from her husband (Moses father) Alphosus Lemuel Moses, shortly before he was born. Branco was Portuguese and living in Hawaii with her husband when she became pregnant. She sailed to Long Beach, California where Moses was born on April 9th, 1926, the youngest of 3 children. Periodically, mostly during summers, Moses would visit his father in Hawaii.
Between the ages of 8 and 9, Moses was home schooled to prevent contracting Tuberculosis. At the age of 10, his older brother (age 14) died as a result of a defective valve in his heart. Moses went back to school until age 17 when he dropped out to enlist in the Navy.
He was accepted into the Navy Medical Corps and served as a scrub assistant, assisting in operations at the San Diego Naval Hospital. Upon leaving the Navy in 1947 (age 22) Moses enrolled in a pre med program at Long Beach City College. While very intelligent, Moses had poor memorization skills and as a result would not be accepted into a medical school in the United States.
Deciding not to become a doctor, Moses enrolled in his first art classes with eccentric Pedro Miller, a graduate from the Art Institute of Chicago. Sitting in the back and terrified of criticism from Miller, Moses would finger-paint his first still life in class while making jokes with his friends. Miller walked over to check on Moses’ work and immediately declared him “a real artist.”
In 1949, Moses left Long Beach City College and transferred to the UCLA. Moses felt that UCLA’s art department was not suited for him. He stuck it out for a year and transferred to the University of Oregon, which he quickly found too conservative. Once again, he decided to leave school. He worked odd jobs including a six-month messenger position for Twentieth Century Fox and a brief stint as a crewmember on a sardine clipper ship.
In 1953, Moses re-enrolled at UCLA. He quickly becomes friends with Craig Kauffman. It is through Kauffman that Moses met the future owner of the Ferus Gallery, Walter Hopps. To finish up his master’s degree, Moses held his graduate show at the Ferus Gallery rather than on his college campus. This infuriated the faculty at UCLA. Moses would be the second artist to have a solo show at the Ferus Gallery.
Moses moved to New York for just over a year where he met his soon to be wife, Avilda Peters. Together they rented a loft on Broad St., making them neighbors with Agnes Martin andEllsworth Kelly. Moses began to hang around the Cedar Tavern where he met Willem de Kooning, Franz Kline, Mark Rothko and Milton Resnick,
In 1960, Moses married Avilda Peters and together they moved to Virginia where they had their first son, Cedd Moses. Shortly after, they moved to San Francisco and by 1961, they moved again to L.A. Still involved with the Ferus Gallery, Moses met Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston and American art critic Dave Hickey. In 1962, Moses’ second son Andy Moses is born.
Moses had now created two separate bodies of work. His first body of work, late 1950s early 1960s, began with depictions of architectural constructions. Shortly after, Moses began work on his Rose Drawings. In these works his primary focus was surface and process. He develops his ideas on non-objective art and process. Moses would continually return to process throughout his career.
In 1971, Moses began experimenting more with process and material, introducing resin into his work. In his resin/latex paintings, Moses tries to break away from the containment of the
canvas. There are more layers and chaos in his works. The public adored these works and it became Moses’ first venture in selling. He had a show with Riko Mizuno where his resin paintings quickly sold out. Despite this success, however, Moses lost the resin as a result of its toxicity. Regardless, his element of surprise remains important. The idea of process remains his focus as opposed to the finished product.
In the early 1970s, shortly after his show with Riko Mizuno, Moses had his first large commission at the Walker Museum in Minneapolis, MN. Later, a show is offered to him at Sonnabend Gallery in New York. After much debate ending with his refusal to sign a contract, Sonnabend Gallery would not show his work.
During this time Moses began introducing the diagonal grid into his work. Never a believer in change, the mutations in his paintings come from the work preceding. The discoveries and the journey are what remain most important to Moses.
In 1973, Moses had his first show with Nick Wilder and in 1974, he had with Andre Emmerich Gallery in New York. It is after this show that famed art critic Clement Greenberg dubs Moses “a player.” During this time, Moses also becomes close with artist James Hayward. He began working on his monochrome paintings and in 1977 sold out a show at Margo Leavin Gallery in Los Angeles, CA. Moses produces more monochrome paintings for Margo Leavin. Leavin refused to let Moses show his works with anyone else and shortly after Moses pulled out of the deal. As a result, these paintings were never shown or sold.
In 1980, Moses received a Guggenheim Fellowship. Moses began working with Peter Goulds at L.A. Louver. He remained with Goulds for the next 15 years. He began attaching panels of different size to create larger works. Around 1987, diagonal grids were reintroduced. This time, however, diagonals are loose squiggles or “worms.”
During the 1990’s, his paintings became even more lose but remained grid based and non-objective. In the early 1990’s, Moses began to experiment with materials that woud resist each other. By the late 1990’s, he began changing materials again. He starts using new tools to drag and layer is paint. From this point on, the grid is only relevant in that it underlies the composition oriented to the rectangle. In 1996, Moses’ paintings were documented in a major retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Arts
Moses’ most recent paintings are a large multi-panel Waterfall Series containing specs of glitter and brilliant, florescent colors and the smokey atmospheric paintings of his Sumo series. These contain elements spray painted through netting and stencils, layered on top of one another.
Ed Moses is currently represented by Mark Borghi Fine Art, New York, NY.