John Moore

John Moore (0)

| Caracas, Venezuela

Venezuelan filmmaker and designer John Moore emerged in the late 1970s within the vibrant Super-8 experimental film movement in Caracas, a scene that fostered some of the most formally adventurous works in Latin American cinema of the period. Trained as a graphic designer at the Instituto de Diseño Neumann (1972–1976), Moore brought a strong visual and typographic sensibility to his films, working with animation, painted imagery and rapid visual montage. His short Sensorial (1978) won Best Film at the Caracas Super-8 Film Festival, one of the key platforms for experimental cinema in the region. In Faces (1982), a one-minute animated film, Moore was selected for the Directors’ Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival. Alongside figures such as Diego Rísquez, Julio Neri and Carlos Castillo, Moore formed part of a generation that expanded the possibilities of Venezuelan cinema through the aesthetic freedom of Super-8, blending visual arts, performance and film experimentation. Parallel to his filmmaking career, Moore became one of Venezuela’s most prolific type designers and art directors. After studying with Milton Glaser in 1980, he worked as creative director in major advertising agencies including Foote, Cone & Belding, Leo Burnett and J. Walter Thompson, leading campaigns for international brands such as Kraft, Procter & Gamble and SC Johnson. His typographic work has received awards at the Tipos Latinos Biennial and has been presented in international design conferences, while his artistic practice has also extended to visual documentation created during scientific expeditions in the Amazon basin.

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NextFilm 2026