You’ll
find them in the corner of a smoky 1920s Paris
nightclub, or half-hidden behind the plush red
curtain at a New York theater. Teresa Moore’s
luminous femme fatales smolder under the stage
lights. Their sultry eyes gaze steadily back at
you as a smile plays across their full, lacquered
mouths. Using a cocktail palette of rich reds,
deep blues, and glowing yellows, the artist creates
these lush portraits set in a world of dusky glamour.
Notice the defined graphic lines, sharp angles
and vibrant colors of these works, which accentuate
the bold sensuality of these women.
Teresa Moore’s work has been exhibited in
Paris, Italy, and Spain and collected throughout
Europe and the U.S., and is part of the collection
at the National Museum of Women in the Arts Library
and Archive in Washington, D.C.
Moore's
works conjures images from bawdy brothels decked
in sumptuous red velvet to whisky-soaked cabarets
brimming with lusty jazz strains.
Self-taught and painting mainly with her fingers,
Moore creates an atmosphere of nightlife, good
times and fleeting romances. Her images bring
to life a world at once sensuous, sophisticated,
sometimes sweet yet always alluring.
Femmes fatales smolder with long-fingered hands
dangling cigarettes and cocktails to their lush
lacquered lips. Glamorous and vulnerable, they
contemplate a noir netherworld somewhere between
dusk and twilight.
And these decadent dames get around. Moore’s
work is exhibited and collected from New York,
Miami, and Chicago to Seattle, New Orleans, Canada,
France and Italy. Moore’s fiery independence
shows through in these characters, who all seem
to have their own checkered pasts, drawn from
deep within the artist’s own fantasies and
realities, past and present.