Tattooist JD Moore’s Study Of Skin Led Him To Fine Art

“When I look at skin very objectively, it reveals very fascinating things.”

By Miguel PerezSeptember 21, 2020 10:06 am, , ,

From KERA/Art&Seek:

Editor’s Note: As the pandemic lays bare racial inequities in healthcare access and protests against police violence and racial injustice persist across the country, Art&Seek wanted to know what impact this moment in history was having on the creativity of Black artists in North Texas. In this installment, tattoo artist and painter J.D. Moore shares his fascination with skin.

J.D. Moore has made a career out of the study of skin.

“When I look at skin very objectively, it reveals very fascinating things,” he said. “The biological makeup of the skin. How it varies. How it reacts.”

Moore has a collection of brightly colored coil tattoo machines, which he uses at the Last Angels tattoo parlor in East Dallas.

Skin is his canvas as a tattoo artist. He began an apprenticeship shortly after graduating high school, and now business is booming at Last Angels, the parlor where Moore works.

But, skin is also the focus of his other passion.

Moore explores the nuances of skin, particularly Black skin, through lush oil portraits and the large-scale murals he creates all over Dallas-Fort Worth.

Many of his works depict Black women in repose, elegantly dressed with every fold and crease of fabric on display.

It’s an aesthetic that Moore latched onto before he ever put paint to canvas.

“The preparation of a tattoo requires a lot of steps,” Moore said. “It’s a lot of prep-work.”

As a tattoo apprentice, Moore learned about all sorts of inking styles, but he was most drawn to the lifelike, intricate works of the Renaissance and Baroque eras.

“There’s all these statues that work really well as tattoos,” he said. “It’s a tattoo style that’s predominantly black and grey, which looks like the stone, white marble sculpture.”

He was so inspired by Classical art that he picked up a paintbrush and went straight to the source.

“I went to Italy, and I lived in Tuscany for about a month,” Moore said. “My primary reason for being there was I want to learn how to fresco paint. Really take what I say I’m influenced by, see it in person, marinate on it, have it become a life experience, and then see what happens.”

Moore came back from his artist residency with an even greater appreciation of the body. It’s shaped his entire practice.

“Because I do work so much with bodies and seeing the shapes in bodies when I’m putting designs on,” he said. “You sit with it long enough, you can really start to understand at least a little bit more than what it gives you at first glance.”

His training lets Moore see skin for what it is: a living organ.

“It is a constant changing variable from person to person,” Moore said. “The tone of their skin, the texture of their skin, even the placement on their body, the skin changes.”

 

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“Cayendo”-12”x12” oil & acrylic on hand stretched canvas. From the MŪDE series.

A post shared by JD Moore (@jdmooreportfolios) on

But, he knows that when he steps outside his East Dallas tattoo parlor, skin gets more complicated.

“There’s a lot of it though that’s based in the mental coding that we’ve been programmed with,” Moore said.

Skin color is, after all, the foundation on which race was constructed, he says. It’s impossible for him as a Black artist to ignore race and racism in his work.

Addressing it is a responsibility. It’s also a distraction.

“I hate that I call it that because it is something worthy of my attention,” he said.

Moore would rather be thinking about skin through other lenses: science, philosophy, or spirituality.

But the events this summer — George Floyd’s death and the wave of protests against police violence —have commanded his attention.

“I had to stop that, put that book away, put that painting away,” Moore said. “A few weeks later, I’m at City Hall painting Black Lives Matter.”

Moore is learning to balance the responsibility he feels to speak out against racism, with his desire to explore skin in deeper ways.

“My subject matter focuses on the most foundational problem, which is the way we view and treat Black women,” he said. “I feel like as an artist that’s all I can do is use my tool to express and to start a conversation.”

The Tarrant Regional Water District recently commissioned him to paint a mural on a floodgate in Fort Worth.

He chose to paint his sister.

“So, it has this angelic appearance to it,” Moore said. “With this red dress on, holding red fabric, walking through water, and there is this glow coming from her chest.”

The mural overlooks the Trinity River, its subject standing triumphant and powerful, her skin radiant.

“It’s hard to conceal the beauty that is there,” he said. “I feel like you’re better off letting it be.”

Her body language — like in all of Moore’s paintings — speaks volumes.

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