Carol Moses | Studio 213
Painting, drawing, photography, word-paintings
Carol Moses is an artist living in Cambridge, MA, who creates non-representational tableaus, employing grids, patterns, repeated linear elements, and biomorphic forms, in a distinctive visual vocabulary. Discrete styles namely calligraphic, gestural, and geometric appear throughout her omnivorous practice that moves between drawing, painting, printmaking and photography. Her artistic work creates balance, moving through color and form to create a visual neologism all her own. In childhood, Moses gravitated towards logic, math, and science, absorbing the nuance and minutiae of patterns in the natural world. Study in cultural anthropology and linguistics also tacitly influenced her sui generis painting and photography.
Painting, drawing, photography, word-paintings
Carol Moses is an artist living in Cambridge, MA, who creates non-representational tableaus, employing grids, patterns, repeated linear elements, and biomorphic forms, in a distinctive visual vocabulary. Discrete styles namely calligraphic, gestural, and geometric appear throughout her omnivorous practice that moves between drawing, painting, printmaking and photography. Her artistic work creates balance, moving through color and form to create a visual neologism all her own. In childhood, Moses gravitated towards logic, math, and science, absorbing the nuance and minutiae of patterns in the natural world. Study in cultural anthropology and linguistics also tacitly influenced her sui generis painting and photography.
Painting, drawing, photography, word-paintings
Carol Moses is an artist living in Cambridge, MA, who creates non-representational tableaus, employing grids, patterns, repeated linear elements, and biomorphic forms, in a distinctive visual vocabulary. Discrete styles namely calligraphic, gestural, and geometric appear throughout her omnivorous practice that moves between drawing, painting, printmaking and photography. Her artistic work creates balance, moving through color and form to create a visual neologism all her own. In childhood, Moses gravitated towards logic, math, and science, absorbing the nuance and minutiae of patterns in the natural world. Study in cultural anthropology and linguistics also tacitly influenced her sui generis painting and photography.