Luhring Augustine is pleased to announce representation of the Estate of Jeremy Moon with an exhibition
marking the first US solo presentation of the artist’s work.
Moon (1934–1973) is best known for his large-scale geometric paintings that explore form and space
through unmodulated planes of color. He emerged onto the London scene in the early 1960s amidst the
framework of Color Field and Hard-Edge Abstraction. Like many artists of this period, Moon sought a degree
of wholeness within his compositions, creating works where painted geometries found affinities with the
canvas’s overall shape. His use of the grid as a structural device was central to his working method; its rigid
organization, yet flexible expandability, allowed him to bracket fields of color in a manner that was
exploratory and effectual. Moon shrank, enlarged, skewed, and folded the grid across numerous works in his
efforts to reveal ambiguity in pictorial space.
Moon’s singular visual language is informed by his long-standing interest in dance and choreography. His
work is saturated with rhythm-generating patterns and shapes with inherent directionalities, together forming
a perceptible movement that subverts the static quality of painting. Such tensions are evident within his Yshaped
paintings, whose concentric bands radiate outward, only to reverberate back again after negotiating
with the canvas’s edge. Similarly, other works enact the push and pull of receding and protruding space as
he juxtaposes flat, geometric forms alongside their perspectival counterparts. Despite the meticulous
precision of Moon’s paintings, subtle asymmetries deliberately destabilize the unity of his compositions,
further challenging an austerity often associated with geometric abstraction.
At the center of this exhibition lies Moon’s floor sculpture entitled 3D 1 72, consisting of thirteen parts that fit
along the contours of a distorted grid. Completed a year before his untimely passing, this work epitomizes
Moon’s continued interest in generating movement and a desire to extend painterly space to an architectural
equivalent. As Moon began his artistic career experimenting with sculpture, it is within this framework that
his conceptual processes regarding figure-ground relationships, motion, and scale become most apparent.
His practice led him though junctures of critical insight and inquiry, which culminated in a prolific body of
work vested with an honest character and emotional vitality.
Born in Altrincham, England, Moon received a law degree at Christ’s College, Cambridge. He worked in
advertising and enrolled briefly at Central School of Art, before devoting himself to art in the early 1960s. He
taught sculpture at Saint Martin’s School of Art and painting at Chelsea School of Art, while exhibiting
extensively within the United Kingdom and internationally. He died in London after a motorcycle accident at
the age of 39. The first retrospective of his work took place in 1976 at the Serpentine Gallery in London, and
travelled to Manchester City Art Gallery, Manchester; Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge; Ulster Museum, Belfast; and
Ikon Gallery, Birmingham. His work is represented in the permanent collections of several international
institutions including Tate, London; British Museum, London; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Museum of
Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo; and Rhode
Island School of Design Museum, Providence.