R
Sep 22–Nov 3, 2002

Julie MoosMonsanto

Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Kathy and Fred, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Kathy and Fred, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto, Installation View, 2002.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto, Installation View, 2002.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Joe and Tony, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Daryll and Dennis, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Ralph and Doug, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Wilbur, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto, Installation View, 2002.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Ken and Anita, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Resa and Phil, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto Series: Kathy and Fred, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto: CJ and Craig, 2001.

  • Julie Moos, Monsanto: Greg and Nancy, 2001.

  • From poker-faced high school friends and rivals, to homeowners beside their housekeepers, to Baptist churchgoers competing side-by-side in ever-more elaborate Sunday hats, Julie Moos uses photographic series to expose the intricacies of human relationships. Currently living and working in Birmingham, Alabama, Moos was an artist-in-residence at the St. Louis Forum for Contemporary Art when she created a body of work entitled Monsanto Series, presenting the contemporary American farmer among his fields. Specifically, Moos photographed farmers working with Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO’s) produced by the Monsanto Company, whose world headquarters is based in St. Louis. In a climate where developments in biogenetic engineering are met with increasing controversy, Moos chose to distance herself and her subjects from the debate and instead offer a straightforward, quasi-documentary presentation of individuals, the land, and the corporation behind them. The formal composition of the photographs recalls a long tradition of iconic portraits depicting the American farmer with his acreage spread about him. As is her practice, Moos posed the farmers in pairs: brothers, husbands and wives, fathers and sons. In a departure from her earlier series, however, the primary interplay is not between the two individuals, but between the individuals and their surrounding landscape-in this case framed by the overarching presence of the corporation.

    Recently featured in the 2002 Whitney Biennial, Julie Moos has had solo exhibitions at the Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, AL; Fredericks Freiser Gallery, New York and the Marcia Wood Gallery in Atlanta, GA. She has participated in the group exhibitions Stagings: Janieta Eyre, Julie Moos, Zwelethu Mthethwa at the Contemporary Art Museum in St. Louis, MO; Chelsea Rising at the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans, LA; Collectors Choice at Exit Art in New York and at Sable-Castelli Gallery, Toronto.

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