Draft:Charles Alexander Moffat

Charles Alexander Moffat or Charles Moffat (born 1979 in Wingham, Ontario, Canada[citation needed]) is a controversial Canadian artist, writer and movie director. His artwork has appeared in the film Fuck and an art documentary about feminist artist Cindy Sherman. Moffat also has directed movies and short videos like "The Fear Americans Series", "Nuclear Winter" and "Nightmares in the Morning".

Biography edit

Charles Moffat studied at Hillcrest Public School in Teeswater, Walkerton District Secondary School in Walkerton, John Diefenbaker Secondary School in Hanover and at York University,[1] in Toronto.

Moffat's acrylic and oil paintings focuses on controversial topics such as abortion, genetic manipulation, sexuality,[1] gothic culture, fetishes, feminism, American politics, censorship, the Korean Demilitarized Zone and atheism.

Moffat is also known for his paintings of female violinists.[2] His painting "United States Censorship"[1] appeared in the documentary Fuck.

Writing edit

Moffat is a prolific writer and has written four fantasy novels including The Paladin Assassin (1995), Ice War (1996), King Culprit (1997) and Rise of the Blade (1998). The fourth book Rise of the Blade was meant to be published as part of The Harpers Series for the Forgotten Realms fantasy world, but The Harpers Series was canceled.[3]

Moffat has also written on a variety of topics including from art history, mythology and politics including "The Neo-Gothic Art Manifesto[4]", "The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction", "The Demonification of Lilith" and "Canadian Unity and Quebec Separation". He translated a Sumerian legend about Lilith into English.[5]

David Annwn Jones in his 2018 book Gothic Effigy: A Guide to Dark Visibilities describes Moffat as "a formative figure of the Neo-Gothic movement" and notes his statement from the 2001 work The Neo-Gothic Art Manifesto as "We are social rebels, misfits, a society within a society", and that his 2003 revised version states: "GOTH IS ABOUT REBELLING AGAINST SOCIAL NORMS, AND DEFYING OLD FASHIONED SEXUALITY & REPRESSIVE GOVERNMENT AND RELIGION".[6] Jones goes on to say about Moffat: "There is no hint of compromise here in those strident capitalisations. Those for whom the mordant outlines of gravestones and otherworldliness of tombs provide an opportunity to express their liberty, create a spectacle, strike a pose or imitate the CD covers of their favourite Goth rock band might argue that such words support their case. Moffat's painting Sexual Blasphemy 1 (2005) shows a rear view of a naked woman dressed only in net stockings and with spiral armlet kneeling before a Celtic monumental cross. It is a deeply sensual, thoughtful and provocative image. The viewer enters into the rich ambiguity of the painting: is the subject defying the Christian symbol with her bodily exposure or honouring an older pagan mystical tradition, or both at once? It does seem a particularly apt image to contemplate in this context."[6] Jones later notes: "Contemporary Gothic often places a new emphasis on nuanced figurative representation. Charles Alexander Moffat's paintings have already been mentioned. His Succubus in Corset (2001), reminiscent of Expressionism and E. L. Kirchner's creations, is a powerful and unnerving visual statement, revealing a leaning, dark-haired young woman with her clawed wings and inescapable, probing gaze seemingly fixed on the observer."[6]

Trivia edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Charles Alexander Moffat". Art.Base. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  2. ^ Violinist painting by Charles Alexander Moffat
  3. ^ List of Forgotten Realms Novels, retrieved on May 25th 2007.
  4. ^ Excerpt from "The Neo-Gothic Art Manifesto" in the European Art Magazine, September 2006
  5. ^ Sumerian Lilith, retrieved on May 25th 2007.
  6. ^ a b c Jones, David Annwn (2018). Gothic Effigy: A Guide to Dark Visibilities. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-0122-8. Retrieved 2024-01-12 – via Google Books.

Internal links edit

External links edit


Category:1979 births Category:Artists from Toronto Category:Canadian art historians Category:Canadian fantasy writers Category:Canadian film directors Category:Canadian film producers Category:Canadian painters Category:Canadian photographers Category:Contemporary artists Category:English-language film directors Category:Living people Category:People from Huron County, Ontario Category:Postmodern artists