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MOCA Store Presents Eve Wood’s Remarks On Color Artist Talk, Screening, and Book Signing
MOCA Store Presents Eve Wood’s Remarks On Color Artist Talk, Screening, and Book Signing

MOCA Store Presents Eve Wood’s Remarks On Color
Artist Talk, Screening, and Book Signing

MOCA Store

Join the MOCA Store for an evening celebrating Eve Wood’s new monograph, Remarks on Color (DoppelHouse Press, 2023). The evening will feature a reading by Wood, followed by a screening of Unfurled (2023), a short documentary film by Gemini Productions about Wood’s work, and will conclude with a book signing.

In Remarks on Color, Wood shares her witty take on life through a kaleidoscope of reflections on color. Originating as a column in Artillery magazine, the expanded Remarks on Color showcases Wood’s imaginative characters alongside studies that combat pandemic-era isolation and malaise with irreverent humor. Vivid and resistant, these writings allow readers to immerse themselves in the perspective of an iconic LA voice.

Eve Wood is a Los Angeles-based artist and art critic for Artillery, Tema Celeste, Whitehot, Art & Cake, and Riot Material. Her writing and poetry has been widely published in magazines and literary journals such as The New Republic, Best American Poetry 1997The Denver Quarterly, North American Review, The Massachusetts Review, The Santa Monica Review, Poetry, The Seattle Review, and many others. She holds a BFA and MFA (1992, 1994) from California Institute of the Arts and an MFA from UC Irvine (1996) in creative writing. She is the recipient of a Jacob Javits Fellowship and a California Community Foundation Fellowship. Her drawings and paintings have been exhibited nationally and internationally in galleries such as Susanne Vielmetter, Western Project, Ochi Projects, and Track 16 Gallery, which currently represents her. She is the author and/or illustrator of seven collections of poetry and chapbooks, including The Artists’ Prison (X Artists’ Books); her latest book of poems, A Cadence for Redemption (Del Sol Press) constitutes an imaginary conversation between Abraham Lincoln and a 21st-century American woman trying to make sense of the chaos around her, with a focus on sociopolitical issues such as bigotry, hate crimes, war, apathy and personal responsibility.