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Fay
Moore is one of the first women to receive recognition as a
“sports artist.” Although
she is best known for her thoroughbred racing scenes, Moore
has not limited herself to just one sport; instead, she has
painted hockey, football, baseball, and squash.
Her focus and
success with outstanding collectors became centered on her
interpretation of thoroughbred racing and resulted in a number
of mural commissions for racetracks and related corporations
across the country.
An experience
draughtsman and a loosely impressionistic colorist, she is
well-informed in classical anatomy and composition.
She describes
her painting as “neo-pointillist.”
In easel-scale work of recent years, her signature
style of many layered inks, watercolors, gouaches and pastels
has attracted many awards, reviews and articles.
“I have
tried every style of painting I’ve seen or heard about and
thought it might interest me, but I have never been a minimalist.
I like things that are complex and demand effort,”
Moore states.
A Renaissance
woman who has worked in fashion, stage-design and window
display, and has been on the faculty of the Yale Graduate School
of Drama, Carnegie Mellon University and the University of
Kansas City. She is now represented in museums and college
collections.
Having
studied painting earlier with such diverse masters as
hard-edge pioneer Paul Feeley at Benninton College and
colorist Henry Hensche at the Cape Cod School of Art, her
professional painting career began in the 1960s.
Moore’s
work can be seen in a variety of galleries, museums, and
magazines; including Heike Pickett Gallery in
Lexington-Versailles, KY; Frost and Reed in London; The
Sporting Gallery in Middleburg, VA; the Kentucky Derby Museum, and The
Artist’s Magazine.
She is a
Trustee of the National Art Museum of Sport, chairman
of The American Academy of Equine Art, and an officer of the
National Arts Club where she maintains a studio.
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