Joan Moment
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Joan Moment (born 1938) is an American painter based in Northern California.Dalkey, Victoria. "Circular Logic: Joan Moment's Works Take on a New Shape," ''Sacramento Bee'', October 29, 1989, p. 16, 24.Olivant, David
"Joan Moment at JayJay and LIMN Galleries,"
''Squarecylinder'', September 7, 2009. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
Baker, Kenneth
"Abstraction has its Moment,"
''San Francisco Chronicle'', August 15, 2009. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
She emerged from the 1960s Northern California
Funk art Funk art is an American art movement that was a reaction against the nonobjectivity of abstract expressionism. An anti-establishment movement, Funk art brought figuration back as subject matter in painting again rather than limiting itself to th ...
movementCouzens, Julia
"Beyond Funk,"
''Squarecylinder'', September 9, 2021. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
Weidenbaum, Marc
"A Moment in Time,"
''Sactown Magazine'', October/November 2013, p. 91–6. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
and gained attention when the
Whitney Museum of American Art The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is an art museum in the Meatpacking District and West Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–1942), ...
Curator
Marcia Tucker Marcia Tucker (born Marcia Silverman; April 11, 1940 – October 17, 2006)Smith, Roberta ''The New York Times'' (October 19, 2006), Retrieved 23 November 2014. was an American art historian, art critic and curator. In 1977 she founded the New M ...
selected her for the 1973 Biennial and for a solo exhibition at the Whitney in 1974.Whitney Museum of American Art
Whitney Biennial 1973
Exhibitions. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Tucker, Marcia
''Joan Moment''
New York: Whitney Museum of Art, 1974. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Moment is known for process-oriented paintings that employ non-traditional materials and techniques evoking vital energies (biological, sexual, cosmic) conveyed through archetypal iconography.Van Proyen, Mark. "Seeking a Primordial Form," ''Artweek'', December 21, 1985.Paglia, Michael
"Joan Moment and Monroe Hodder Get the Havu Gallery Off to a Running Start in 2011,"
''Westword'', January 11, 2011. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Porges, Maria. "Joan Moment: Bluer Than Blue," ''Numinous: The Paintings of Joan Moment'', Sacramento, CA: JayJay Gallery, 2013. Though briefly aligned with Funk—which was often defined by ribald humor and irreverence toward art-world pretensions—her work diverged by the mid-1970s, fusing abstraction and figuration in paintings that writers compared to
prehistoric Prehistory, also known as pre-literary history, is the period of human history between the use of the first stone tools by hominins 3.3 million years ago and the beginning of recorded history with the invention of writing systems. The use of ...
and tribal art.Linhares, Phil. "Interview: Joan Moment," ''Currant'', February–March 1976.Roth, David M. "Sacramento Rising: California's Capitol, A Longtime Artistic Hub Has Finally Come Into Its Own," ''Art Ltd.'', September/October 2008, p. S10. Critic Victoria Dalkey wrote that Moment's methods combined chance and improvisation to address "forces embodied in a universe too large for us to comprehend, as well as the ... fragility and transience of the material world."Dalkey, Victoria. "Once and Future Light: Patterns and Connections in 'Aerial Luminations,'" ''Sacramento Bee'', May 21, 2006. In addition to the Whitney, Moment has exhibited at the Oakland Museum,
Crocker Art Museum The Crocker Art Museum is the oldest art museum in the Western United States, located in Sacramento, California. Founded in 1885, the museum holds one of the premier collections of Californian art. The collection includes American works dating f ...
and Long Beach Museum of Art.Linhares, Phil. ''From the Studio: Recent Paintings and Sculpture, 20 California Artists'', Oakland, CA: Oakland Museum, 1992.Clisby Roger D. ''Joan Moment'', Sacramento, CA: Crocker Art Museum, 1981.Muchnic, Suzanne. "Drawing By California Painters," ''Los Angeles Times'', February 16, 1982. Her work belongs to the public art collections of the Crocker and Oakland Museums, the
Manetti Shrem Museum of Art The Manetti Shrem Museum of Art is a fine arts museum located at the University of California, Davis in Davis, California. Its full name is the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art. The museum opened on November 13, 2016. According t ...
, and the City of Sacramento, among others.VanAirsdale, S.T
"The Art of the Matter,"
''Sactown Magazine'', June/July 2015, p. 77–87. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Manetti Shrem Museum of Art
"New Flavors: Collected at the Candy Store – Selections from the Manetti Shrem Museum."
Retrieved November 21, 2022.
City of Sacramento
"Joan Moment, ''A Fragment of the Universe''
Programs, Arts + Culture. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
She lives in Sacramento and is professor emerita at California State University, Sacramento.Wetterstrom, Sydney. "Joan Moment," ''Selected Works from the Sacramento State Art Collection'', Sacramento, CA: California State University, Sacramento, 2017, p. 15–6.


Early life and career

Moment was born in rural
Sellersville, Pennsylvania Sellersville is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The population was 4,249 at the 2010 census. It is in the Pennridge School District. History Sellersville was founded in the early 18th century. It was centered on a major road known as B ...
, in 1938, and raised in Fairfield, Connecticut. She earned BS and RN degrees from the
University of Connecticut The University of Connecticut (UConn) is a public land-grant research university in Storrs, Connecticut, a village in the town of Mansfield. The primary 4,400-acre (17.8 km2) campus is in Storrs, approximately a half hour's drive from Hart ...
(at Yale Medical Center), where, after graduating in 1960, she worked as a psychiatric and public health RN. Writers have connected her medical experience to the biological undercurrents in her art. In the mid-1960s, her mother's untimely death from illness and the physical suffering she witnessed as a nurse convinced Moment to leave that career for art school. The metaphysical questions provoked by those experiences found voice in ''Burial'' (1966), a pivotal, Funk-inspired work consisting of a doll in an open suitcase surrounded by radio tubes, plastic cookie cutters and personal ephemera; it marked Moment's passage into a new phase of her life.O'Brien, Elaine. "To Image the Soul: The Paintings of Joan Moment,
''Joan Moment: Aerial Luminations''
Turlock, CA: California State University, Stanislaus, 2006. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
She earned an MFA at the
University of Colorado Boulder The University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder, CU, or Colorado) is a public research university in Boulder, Colorado. Founded in 1876, five months before Colorado became a state, it is the flagship university of the University of Colorado syst ...
(1970), studying under Funk artist
William T. Wiley William Thomas Wiley (October 21, 1937April 25, 2021) was an American artist. His work spanned a broad range of media including drawing, painting, sculpture, film, performance, and pinball. At least some of Wiley's work has been referred to as ...
and painter and sculptor
Roland Reiss Roland Reiss (May 15, 1929– December 13, 2020) was an American artist known for his miniature tableaux and paintings. Early life, education and military service Roland Reiss was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1929, during the Great Depression ...
. There, she produced work with unconventional materials (horse manure, cheesecloth, household objects) that explored personal fears and experiences.Mangen, Nick. "The Media Compared," ''Colorado Daily'', July 1968.''The Washington Post'', "Horse Manure Is Show Stopper," July 13, 1968. In 1970, Moment accepted a teaching position at California State University, Sacramento (CSUS), where she taught sculpture, painting and art history until retiring in 2004.Simon, Richard. "Joan Moment: artists needn't cater to the average person," ''The Sacramento Union'', August 16, 1981, p. D14–5. She also began exhibiting in Northern California, participating in group shows at the
San Francisco Art Institute San Francisco Art Institute (SFAI) was a private college of contemporary art in San Francisco, California. Founded in 1871, SFAI was one of the oldest art schools in the United States and the oldest west of the Mississippi River. Approximately ...
, the Oakland Museum and the Crocker Art Museum (including the international traveling show, "Sacramento Sampler," 1972).Frankenstein, Alfred. "Sacramento Valley," ''San Francisco Chronicle'', April 1972.Clisby Roger D
''Sacramento Sampler I''
Sacramento, CA: E.B. Crocker Art Gallery, 1972. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
These exhibitions preceded her inclusion in the 1973 Whitney Biennial and a solo exhibition there in 1974. Over the next decade, her work appeared in solo exhibition at the Crocker (1981) and in group shows at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (L.A.C.E), Long Beach Museum of Art, and
San Jose Museum of Art The San José Museum of Art (SJMA) is a modern and contemporary art museum in downtown San Jose, downtown San Jose, California, United States. Founded in 1969, the museum holds a permanent collection with an emphasis on West Coast of the United Sta ...
, among other institutions.Rosenthal, Adrian. "The Animal Kingdom," ''Artweek'', July 1979.Knight, Christopher. "A Cozy Exhibition of Drawings," ''Los Angeles Herald Examiner'', January 24, 1982. During that period, she lived bi-coastally in Sacramento and Manhattan before returning to Sacramento in 1993.


Work

Critics have described Moment's painting—spanning mixed media works on paper to wall installations—as "aggressively process-oriented,"Frank, Peter
''Joan Moment: Paintings, Works on Paper, and Wall Installations, 1993–2003''
Huntington Beach, CA: Huntington Beach Art Center, 2003. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
physically immediate, and enduring in its reliance on the natural world as a formal source, despite continual stylistic evolution.Van Proyen, Mark. "Chromamorphology: The Recent Paintings of Joan Moment,
''Joan Moment: Aerial Luminations''
Turlock, CA: California State University, Stanislaus, 2006. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Green, Roger. "Impressive Moments at Galerie Simonne Stern," ''The States-Item'' (New Orleans), February 1979. Mark Van Proyen and other critics have linked her art to the "spiritual abstraction" of early
modernists Modernism is both a philosophy, philosophical and arts movement that arose from broad transformations in Western world, Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The movement reflected a desire for the creation of new fo ...
such as Kandinsky,
Malevich Kazimir Severinovich Malevich ; german: Kasimir Malewitsch; pl, Kazimierz Malewicz; russian: Казими́р Севери́нович Мале́вич ; uk, Казимир Северинович Малевич, translit=Kazymyr Severynovych ...
and Mondrian, who sought to convey metaphysical ideas and omnipresent cosmic and transcendent energies. Moment has worked with varied materials ranging from early mixed media quilts made of cut-up balloons to reliefs made of painted neoprene rubber embedded with layers of gauze or rubber latex. She has also made paintings on vellum, canvas, paper and wood. Methods that she has employed include assemblage, imprinting with found objects or her hands, and "flow painting"—pouring thinned acrylic paint in ways that mimic natural processes, such as flooding, erosion, volcanic activity or cosmic phenomena.Roth, David M. "The Back-Room @ JAYJAY," ''Squarecylinder'', April 11, 2012. Her paintings often rely on the repetition of primordial forms (abstract and referential) in unpredictable arrangements of rich patterning and spontaneous rhythm. Mortality, sexuality, transformation and spirituality have been frequent themes, which she explores using interconnected visual metaphors ranging from the macrocosmic (planets or galaxies) to the microscopic (cells or molecules).


Early painting series (1970–1986)

Moment's early series drew on Funk, the
postminimalism Postminimalism is an art term coined (as post-minimalism) by Robert Pincus-Witten in 1971Chilvers, Ian and Glaves-Smith, John, ''A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art'', second edition (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), p. ...
of
Eva Hesse Eva Hesse (January 11, 1936 – May 29, 1970) was a German-born American sculptor known for her pioneering work in materials such as latex, fiberglass, and plastics. She is one of the artists who ushered in the postminimal art movement in the 196 ...
, and tribal art forms, fusing intuitive aspects of contemporary abstraction to the immediacy and directness of naïve art. This work explored and subverted outsider art and "women's work" traditions such as quilting and sewing through unconventional, often irreverent constructions (balloon quilts, latex dresses), sexual references and iconic imagery. The "Condom Relief Series" (1970–2) examined sexuality and the vulnerability and physicality of the body through a
feminist Feminism is a range of socio-political movements and ideologies that aim to define and establish the political, economic, personal, and social equality of the sexes. Feminism incorporates the position that society prioritizes the male po ...
lens, drawing responses ranging from amusement to shock. These pieces, fabricated out of cheesecloth, gauze, rubber latex and condoms, combined chance occurrences, warped modernist grids and obsessive dot patterning akin to that seen in Australian Aborigine
bark painting Bark painting is an Australian Aboriginal art form, involving painting on the interior of a strip of tree bark. This is a continuing form of artistic expression in Arnhem Land (especially among the Yolngu peoples) and other regions in the Top ...
s and African clay vessels.Martin, Fred. "Joan Moment," ''Art International'', December 1973. ''Haloed Condom Relief Piece'' (1972) employed wiggling networks of condoms applied to a black neoprene ground, surrounded by and painted over with bright colored haloes and dots. Writing in ''Squarecylinder'', Julia Couzens likened their "relentless motion" to writhing "primordial amoebas." In the mid-1970s, Moment turned to archetypal symbols and forms found in paleolithic objects, aboriginal and ancient art, and Byzantine mosaics. The "Dotted Mosaic Paintings" (1973–75) depicted flat, deadpan, iconic forms—animals, fish, plants, people, tropical landscapes and mountains—composed in vibrating, bright dots of color on black rubberized grounds (e.g., ''Waterfall'', 1973). Marcia Tucker described them as "haunting forgotten Edens" that offered "a keyhole view of paradise, a still and magical world that seduces, enchants, and captivates with eccentric, impossible delights." In the "Pattern Paintings" (1978–84), Moment painted crudely rendered geometric shapes on gesso-treated cheesecloth, dresses and chairs—rejecting the conventional square or rectilinear painting format (e.g., ''Shirt Totem'' or ''Rug Dress'', 1978). Their textured surfaces, covered in checkerboard, gridded, concentric or dotted patterns, referenced contemporary concerns with camouflage, aboriginal art, superficiality and the masking power of clothing (''Cocktail Dress'', 1978). In the "Columnar/Planetary" and "Neolithic" series (1983–6), Moment shifted from holistic, iconic compositions to arrangements of floating and stacked Ionic columns, cosmic spirals, and biomorphic, genital-like forms, which blurred surface and image.Dunham, Judith. ''Joan Moment'', Winston Salem, NC: Rockefeller Foundation/Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, 1984.Kelley, Jeff. "Structures and Patterns," ''Artweek'', May 7, 1983, p. 4. She painted these works thickly, investing them with a cartoon-like sexuality whose rawness and energy reviewers compared to outsider art and paintings by Philip Guston and
Jean Dubuffet Jean Philippe Arthur Dubuffet (31 July 1901 – 12 May 1985) was a French Painting, painter and sculpture, sculptor. His idealistic approach to aesthetics embraced so-called "low art" and eschewed traditional standards of beauty in favor of what ...
.Baker, Kenneth. "Trying to Paint Beyond Words," ''San Francisco Chronicle'', December 6, 1985, p. 96. Mark Van Proyen compared the "mytho-erotic imagery" and "biophiliac vitalism" of the Neolithic series to
paleolithic The Paleolithic or Palaeolithic (), also called the Old Stone Age (from Greek: παλαιός ''palaios'', "old" and λίθος ''lithos'', "stone"), is a period in human prehistory that is distinguished by the original development of stone too ...
ritual objects, tantric manuscripts and the stone-cut entangled erotic figures of
Hindu Hindus (; ) are people who religiously adhere to Hinduism.Jeffery D. Long (2007), A Vision for Hinduism, IB Tauris, , pages 35–37 Historically, the term has also been used as a geographical, cultural, and later religious identifier for ...
temples. Paintings from these series employed understated color and crowded arrangements of crude, gestural open-ended forms resembling prehistoric representations of male and female genitalia, teeth, hearts and phalli. Paint-saturated layers suggested surfaces of interconnected living tissue or atmospheric, mythic spaces. Christopher French connected some of these gridded works formally and symbolically to Moment's condom paintings, with archetypal Venus of Willendorf-like forms serving as feminine counterparts to the earlier phallic imagery.French, Christopher. ''Joan Moment: Various States of Being'', Sacramento, CA: California State University, Sacramento/Rena Bransten, San Francisco, 1985.


Later painting (1987–present)

In her later work, Moment has increasingly focused on forms that evoke natural and cosmic phenomena, delineating themes of mortality, temporality and memory, while continuing to experiment with new materials and techniques.Dalkey, Victoria. "Moment uses nature to return to childlike wonder," ''Sacramento Bee'', October 31, 1999, p. 6 (Encore). The "Nature/Cosmology" series (1987–92), built on earlier stacked stones or seeds, employed pile-ups of watery, brightly colored ovals that she painted, rubbed and erased over creamy grounds on vellum (e.g., ''Wall'', 1986; ''Treasure'', 1989). After reading
Pablo Neruda Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto (12 July 1904 – 23 September 1973), better known by his pen name and, later, legal name Pablo Neruda (; ), was a Chilean poet-diplomat and politician who won the 1971 Nobel Prize in Literature. Nerud ...
's ''Stones of the Sky'', she turned to other primordial forms (seeds, stones or boulders, pods, eggs, bubbles, gems, sunflowers), which she portrayed in flat and deep space, evoking emotional and spiritual states. In the early 1990s, Moment began to eschew the brush, painting with her hands and fingers and imprinting with paint-daubed leaves. In doing so, she bridged the gap between sources and imagery in ways that resembled Neolithic cave painting,
Abstract Expressionism Abstract expressionism is a post–World War II art movement in American painting, developed in New York City in the 1940s. It was the first specifically American movement to achieve international influence and put New York at the center of the ...
and the "anthropometries" (body prints) of
Yves Klein Yves Klein (; 28 April 1928 – 6 June 1962) was a French artist and an important figure in post-war European art. He was a leading member of the French artistic movement of Nouveau réalisme founded in 1960 by art critic Pierre Restany. Klein w ...
("Imprinted Paintings," 1993–2002). In the "Hand" works, cascades of palms and splattered, runny paint accrued thickly, often blurring the boundary between subject and ground. Peter Frank described them as visceral, sometimes painful works of anguished human presence addressing loss, genocide and the
AIDS epidemic The global epidemic of HIV/AIDS (human immunodeficiency virus infection and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) began in 1981, and is an ongoing worldwide public health issue. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), as of 2021, HIV/AI ...
. The "Garden Fresco" and "Red Nasturtium" series were controlled, contemplative compositions that critics compared to botanical or Thoreau-like, poetic observations of nature. The built-up leaf imprints, worked onto surfaces with both delicacy and force, range from realistic records to ghostly auras, combining in rhythmic, all-over compositions. Beginning in the early 2000s, Moment turned to what Peter Frank called "flow painting"Frank, Peter. "Going with the Flow," ''Art Ltd'', March 2008, p. 30.—pouring, dragging and puddling thin paint to produce fresco-like grounds suggestive of cosmic gases, tidal eddies, flood plains, lava flows and deserts seen from above.Roth, David M
"'Monumental' @ JayJay,"
''Squarecylinder'', April 6, 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
In the abstract "Universe" series (2002– ), Moment overlaid these grounds with imprinted circular forms of different sizes that were rhythmically stamped, scraped, blotted and allowed to run, creating active, tactile surfaces.
Maria Porges Maria Porges (born 1954 in Oakland, California, USA) is an American visual artist and writer living and working in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her artwork, drawing and three-dimensional works in a variety of media has been exhibited nationally in ...
wrote that this later work moves toward a "transcendence of the specificity of the human body," often suggesting the deep time of outer space and inconceivable distances (e.g., ''Endlessness'', 2009). The paintings have taken several directions, sometimes in tandem: configurations of interlocking, cascading or clustered circles suggesting cells, bubbles and chemical diagrams (e.g., ''Looking Through the Yellow Sea of Blue Moons'', 2004); forms akin to islands (''Archipelago'', 2005) or those seen in Native American dreamcatchers; and evocations of the skies, with orbs and spattered circles that call to mind star constellations, planets or galaxies (''Star Map II'', 2005).Dalkey, Victoria. "JayJay Digs Up Back-Room Fun," ''Sacramento Bee'', April 8, 2012.Dalkey, Victoria
"Shifting gears at JayJay gallery,"
''Sacramento Bee'', March 7, 2016. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Reviewers of Moment's solo exhibitions between 2006 and 2013 increasingly commented on how the artist complicated the experience of distance, scale and space. They noted how oscillations between ground and surface, aerial and terrestrial perspectives, and macrocosmic and microscopic views evoked a sense of interrelatedness (e.g., ''Jiggling Polarities'', 2010; ''Night Waves'', 2013). David Olivant, writing in ''Squarecylinder'', described the paintings as "highly personalized maps of the universe" that sought "to register hefleeting, almost incomprehensible reality" that "we exist outside of time and space." ''San Francisco Chronicle'' critic Kenneth Baker suggested that the work corresponded to the mental postures, crude models and intuitions of feeling with which we face "ultimate realities."


Collections, awards and public art commissions

Moment's work belongs to the public collections of universities, corporations and museums, including the
Allen Memorial Art Museum The Allen Memorial Art Museum (AMAM) is an art museum located in Oberlin, Ohio, and it is run by Oberlin College. Founded in 1917, the collection contains over 15,000 works of art. Overview The AMAM is primarily a teaching museum and is aimed at ...
; California State University, Sacramento; Crocker Art Museum;
Hallie Ford Museum of Art The Hallie Ford Museum of Art (HFMA) is the museum of Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, United States. It is the third largest art museum in Oregon. Opened in 1998, the facility is across the street from the Oregon State Capital in downtow ...
; Manetti Shrem Museum of Art; and Oakland Museum of Art, among others.Allen Memorial Art Museum
''Fish Heads'', Joan Moment
Objects. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
California State University, Sacramento

Art Collection. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
Hallie Ford Museum of Art
Joan Moment, ''Paradise Couple''
Collection. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
She has received artist-in-residence awards sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation (1984). Between 1993 and 2011, Moment created six public art projects. They include ''A Fragment of the Universe'' (2011), a 12 ft× 18 ft glass tesserae mosaic located at the
Sacramento International Airport Sacramento International Airport is located northwest of Downtown Sacramento in Sacramento County, California, United States and covers . It serves the Sacramento Metropolitan Area, and it is run by the Sacramento County Airport System. The a ...
; ''Inside and Outside'' (1998), a 8 ft× 12 ft phototransfer collage for the Wastewater Collection Building in Sacramento; and ''Sunflower'' (1989), a 6 ft× 7 ft painting at the Carol Miller Justice Center.Roth, David M
"Sacramento Airport Art Scores a Hit,"
''Squarecylinder'', October 19, 2011. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
All were commissioned by the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission. Moment also created public works for the University of California, Davis Medical Center (2010) and California State University (2003), and two paintings for American River College's Science and Design building (2013).


References


External links


Joan Moment website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Moment, Joan 21st-century American women painters 21st-century American painters 20th-century American women painters 20th-century American painters American feminist artists Artists from California University of Colorado Boulder alumni 1938 births Living people