Milo Moiré
Swiss performance artist
Why this is trending
Interest in “Milo Moiré” spiked on Wikipedia on 2026-02-26.
Categorised under Arts & Culture, this article fits a familiar pattern. wt.cat.arts.2
At GlyphSignal we surface these trending signals every day—transforming Wikipedia’s vast pageview data into actionable insights about global curiosity.
Key Takeaways
- Milo Moiré ( French: [milo mwaʁe] ; born 7 May 1983) is a Swiss pornographic performer and conceptual artist who produces nude performances and uses her body in her art.
- 2, and Mirror Box .
- She has an art school background and a master's degree in psychology from the University of Bern, Switzerland (2011).
- 1 , performed at Art Cologne 2014, was a work of action painting that involved the expelling of paint filled eggs from her vagina on to a canvas, thus creating an abstract work of art.
- A video description of the work states "At the end of this almost meditative art birth performance the stained canvas is folded up, smoothed and unfolded to a symmetrically reflected picture, astonishingly coloured and full of [strength].
Milo Moiré (French: [milo mwaʁe]; born 7 May 1983) is a Swiss pornographic performer and conceptual artist who produces nude performances and uses her body in her art. Moiré's performance art pieces include PlopEgg, The Script System No.2, and Mirror Box.
Early life and education
Moiré was born in Switzerland, of Slovak and Spanish origin. She has an art school background and a master's degree in psychology from the University of Bern, Switzerland (2011).
Career
2014
Moiré's PlopEgg No. 1, performed at Art Cologne 2014, was a work of action painting that involved the expelling of paint filled eggs from her vagina on to a canvas, thus creating an abstract work of art. The eggs contained ink and acrylic paint. A video description of the work states "At the end of this almost meditative art birth performance the stained canvas is folded up, smoothed and unfolded to a symmetrically reflected picture, astonishingly coloured and full of [strength]." The folding of the resulting canvas created a work which has been compared to a Rorschach test and a womb. Moiré writes: "To create art, I use the original source of femininity – my vagina."
Content sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0