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Euphorion Snow Globe, 2023. Acrylic on canvas over panel, 22 x 17 inches

Joshua Marsh
Euphorion Snow Globe, 2022
Acrylic on canvas over panel
22 x 17 inches

Barbara Takenaga Twins, 2014 Acrylic on wood panel 18 x 24 inches

Barbara Takenaga
Twins, 2014
Acrylic on wood panel
18 x 24 inches

Darren Waterston Berge, 2017 Oil on wood panel 48 x 48 inches

Darren Waterston
Berge, 2017
Oil on wood panel
48 x 48 inches

Mark Innerst Quartered Landscape, 2014 Oil on canvas in the artist's handmade frame 60 x 36 inches (canvas); 67 1/4 x 43 1/4 inches (frame)

Mark Innerst
Quartered Landscape, 2014
Oil on canvas in the artist's handmade frame
60 x 36 inches (canvas); 67 1/4 x 43 1/4 inches (frame)

Carnival Galaxy, 2023 Acrylic and collage on museum board 18 x 21 inches

JoAnne Carson
Carnival Galaxy, 2023
Acrylic and collage on museum board
18 x 21 inches

Steeped, 2023 Gouache on paper 30 1/4 x 37 1/2 inches

Amy Cutler
Steeped, 2023
Gouache on paper
30 1/4 x 37 1/2 inches

Duane Michals Chaos, 1998 Five gelatin silver prints with hand-applied text 4 3/8 x 6 1/2 inches (each image); 5 x 7 inches (each paper) Edition 4/25

Duane Michals
Chaos, 1998
Five gelatin silver prints with hand-applied text
4 3/8 x 6 1/2 inches (each image); 5 x 7 inches (each paper)
Edition 4/25

Press Release

DC Moore Gallery is pleased to present Other Worldly, an exhibition of unbounded landscapes, shadow worlds, and dream-like narratives. These works present portals, collapsing the physical and psychological, still life and landscape, micro and macrocosm. Recognizable forms and familiar object appear like signposts, while art historical references and pop culture allusions are translated into new languages.

Through different means, these artists capture elemental qualities of our shared, tangible world, casting them into potential mirror universes. Mary Frank, Mark Innerst, Joshua Marsh, and Barbara Takenaga use repetition and twinned figures to create afterimages, merging interior and exterior worlds. Darren Waterston evokes a landscape in flux, with forms waxing and waning like light, while Katia Santibañez depicts nature as an infinite spiral. JoAnne Carson constructs hybrid trees that each become their own individual cosmos. Amy Cutler and Duane Michals, in their distinctive visual languages, employ narrative surrealism to explore conditions of being human. Together, the works in this exhibition layer remembered spaces with future forms, yet to be dreamt.

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