Carrie Moyer (born 1960, Detroit) is an American painter, writer, and queer activist whose exuberant abstract paintings fuse feminist politics, graphic design, and art-historical references into vividly layered compositions.
Carrie Moyer was born in Detroit and later moved to New York, where she lives and works in Brooklyn. She studied at Pratt Institute (BFA), received an MA from Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College, and an MFA from the School of Visual Arts, grounding her practice in both painting and design.
In the 1980s she worked as a graphic designer while becoming active in lesbian and gay rights movements, using her design skills in queer and AIDS activism. In 1991 she co-founded the public art project Dyke Action Machine! with photographer Sue Schaffner, one of the first long-running lesbian agitprop initiatives in New York City.
Carrie Moyer’s artworks reimagine American abstraction through lush colour, poured acrylics, glitter, and graphic forms that often suggest bodies, landscapes, or cosmic space without settling into fixed representation. Her paintings draw on Color Field, Surrealism, Pop, 1960s and 1970s counterculture graphics, and feminist art, while centring queer and feminist perspectives.
Moyer often works on the floor, pouring, rolling, mopping, and stippling acrylic paint, then building up strata of translucent and opaque colour that oscillate between flatness and illusory depth. Her witty, allusive titles and use of glitter, saturated colour, and biomorphic forms speak to ‘the pleasure and precarity of the moment’, connecting sensory experience with social and environmental instability.
Since the 1990s, Moyer has developed complex, layered canvases in which translucent pours, hard-edged shapes, and sparkling surfaces ‘cross-wire’ historical references, from ancient fertility figures to modernist abstraction. Works such as Pirate Jenny at The Metropolitan Museum of Art exemplify how she reclaims modernist devices—like Frankenthaler-style pours and geometric framing—for radical feminist and queer ends.
Alongside her studio work, Moyer’s agitprop practice with Dyke Action Machine! appropriated advertising and mass-media strategies to address lesbian visibility and queer politics in public space. For Moyer, the posters and the paintings share a declarative, public-facing voice, melding twentieth-century abstraction and political graphics with the lived experience of the lesbian body.
Moyer has also been included in the Whitney Biennial (2017), further cementing her position within contemporary American painting.
Carrie Moyer has been the subject of significant solo exhibitions in museums and galleries, and her work features in important group exhibitions exploring abstraction, feminism, and queer art. Her work has been presented in the United States and Europe since the early 1990s, and she is represented by DC Moore Gallery in New York as well as exhibiting with Alexander Gray Associates and Pilar Corrias.
To be kept up to date with upcoming exhibitions featuring Carrie Moyer, follow her on Ocula.
Carrie Moyer is an American contemporary artist, abstract painter, writer, and queer activist born in Detroit in 1960, known for combining lush, process-driven abstraction with feminist and queer politics.
You can follow Carrie Moyer on Ocula to learn more about her work, find out about art for sale, contact her gallery, and keep up to date with upcoming exhibitions.
Moyer’s paintings and works on paper are held by institutions such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and have been exhibited at museums including Worcester Art Museum, the Tang Teaching Museum, and the Museum of Arts and Design.
You can follow Carrie Moyer on Ocula to receive alerts on upcoming exhibitions by the artist and discover where her artworks are currently on view.
A lesser-known aspect of Moyer’s career is the extent to which her design background and early work in advertising informed both her Dyke Action Machine! agitprop projects and the graphic structures of her abstract paintings.
Carrie Moyer lives and works in Brooklyn, New York, where she maintains her studio practice alongside teaching. Her position in New York’s art and academic communities has helped shape her role as both a painter and a commentator on contemporary art.
Carrie Moyer’s name is generally pronounced ‘CARE-ee MOY-er’, with ‘Moyer’ rhyming with ‘lawyer’.
Carrie Moyer is represented by leading contemporary art galleries, including DC Moore Gallery in New York, and exhibits with galleries such as Alexander Gray Associates and Pilar Corrias. You can explore Ocula to find out which Ocula galleries represent the artist and enquire directly about buying art by Carrie Moyer, and follow them and their gallery to keep up to date.
Ocula | 2026

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