Ekaterina Moré


Ekaterina Moré is a self-taught Russian painter based in Meerbusch, Germany. Her work focuses on women in the modern world. Her style is influenced by Post-impressionism and Pop-art.

Early life and education

In 1976, Moré was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia to a family of artists. She was raised on the Kamchatka Peninsula and Vladivostok, Russia. In 1990, Moré moved back to Saint Petersburg to finish her education. From 1993 to 1995, Moré studied law in Saint Petersburg. She moved to Rhineland, Germany in 1995.

Career

Moré published her first book, Ekaterina Moré: Bilder aus den Jahren 2003-2004, in August 2004. Rosenthal, a German porcelain manufacturer, partnered with Moré to create china collections the following year. In 2005, her work was displayed in Conzen, Andreas Baumgartl, and Art Gallery Wiesbaden, three renown German galleries. Her work was also used to furnish the Maritim Hotel bar in Berlin, Germany that year. Moré published her second book, Entgegengehen- Macht und Mythos Frau in May 2006. Ten percent of the book's proceeds were donated to the Hannelore Kohl Foundation, a charity founded by Hannelore Kohl to help victims of trauma-induced injuries to the central nervous system. She created a second collection for Rosenthal in 2006. In 2007, Moré created paintings for the Steigenberger Parkhotel in Düsseldorf, Germany. She traveled to India the following year to study the roles of women in foreign cultures.
In 2010, Moré partnered with Lilia Sabantina, a fashion designer, to create a wedding dress. She also collaborated with Carlo Staudt, a furniture designer to create a dresser that year. She contributed to the Colorful Emotions: Art in Glass project by painting on glass objects and doors in 2012. Moré painted Jenny Jürgens, a German actress, in December 2013.

Berlin Wall

She has painted a piece of the remaining Berlin Wall located by Checkpoint Charlie with the theme "Fire and Water."

Modern Muses 2014

In 2014, Moré painted nine female celebrities as a charity project for the Tribute to Bambi Foundation, a charity that helps sick children. Each woman represented a different element of femininity. The celebrities included Annabelle Mandeng, Regina Halmich, Tina Ruland, Sonja Kiefer, Valerie Niehaus, Xenia Seeberg, Tanja Bülter, Cassandra Steen and Jenny Jürgens.

Style

The focus of Moré's paintings are women in the modern world. She uses prismatic and bright colors to create images of "long-haired women with optimism and joy." Moré also uses Cloisonné to manipulate the perspective in her paintings. She works in Human PO-sitive P-ainting, an art style developed from Pop-art.

Exhibits and displays

Moré lives in Meerbusch, Germany with her husband and daughter.