Christopher Knowles: Gavin Brown's Enterprise."Christopher Knowles Christopher Knowles (born 1959) is a U.S. poet who has autism. In 1976, his poetry was used by Robert Wilson for the avant-garde minimalist Philip Glass opera Einstein on the Beach. ," wrote John Ashbery John Ashbery (born July 28, 1927) is an American poet. [1] He has won nearly every major American award for poetry and is recognized as one of America's most important, though still controversial, poets. in 1978, "at the age of nineteen, without exactly meaning to, has become a major figure of the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of avant-garde." For viewers encountering the artist's work for the first time in this engaging survey--the forty-five-year-old's first solo since 1988, which features a selection of his figurative oil-marker drawings, modest object arrangements, and typed text and image works--Ashbery's description is a helpful prologue. It drops clues to the story of an outside who, for thirty years, has cut a distinctive path through that most "inside" of social environments, the contemporary-art world. That Knowles has done so "without exactly meaning to" is part of the reason that his work is so intriguing. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Curator Matthew Higgs's exhibition notes explain how a prenatal condition left the artist with a form of "neurological damage" that contributed to his "complex relationship with written and spoken language." Yet despite his condition, Knowles has hardly lived the life of an isolate. In the early '70s, theater director Robert Wilson Robert Wilson may refer to:
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. uses of language and simple designs produced on an electric typewriter--were published widely in the mid-'80s. Yet despite such indicators of status in the art world, what emerged from the recent exhibition was a compelling picture of a man very much in his own world. Sunshine Superman (1987), a fifteen-minute film about Knowles made by Richard Rutkowski, depicts the artist engaged in activities that suggest the roots of the seriality, repetition, and obsessive particularity par·tic·u·lar·i·ty n. pl. par·tic·u·lar·i·ties 1. The quality or state of being particular rather than general. 2. of his practice. It documents Knowles's project of taping and categorizing his favorite pop songs (such lists also figure in many of his typed works) and shows him carefully arranging toy figures according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. color (an impulse toward typological ordering recapitulated in a pair of mid-'80s sculptures made from stacks of colored paper). And, always, we see him typing, producing pages of minimal forms like windows and grids. There are also bursts of free-form language, which include everything from a disjointed paean Paean (pē`ən), Paean was an epithet for Apollo, the healer. The paean, a hymn of praise to Apollo and often to other gods, was sung as a prayer for safety or deliverance at battles and other important occasions. to radio DJ George Michael to a scrolling list that proposes an abstruse connection between the artist, Brady Bunch star Christopher Knight, and actor Christopher Reeve (here renamed "Reeves"). There are also numerous moments of unexpected poetry, as in Untitled (Say the Word Which Rhymes), 2004, which begins: "What in the world/What is all of this? / Well it is the way of time / Well, let's get on with it." To its credit, Higgs's show never seemed in thrall of Knowles's difference." Yet there's no denying that the championing of functional limitation as a form of creative exceptionalism ex·cep·tion·al·ism n. 1. The condition of being exceptional or unique. 2. The theory or belief that something, especially a nation, does not conform to a pattern or norm. plays out a wish-fulfillment scenario for the art world. Free from the artifice that colors even the most sincere art, Knowles represents the uramateur, whose intuitive approach and apparent lack of ambition are both touchstone for and bete noire of the professional. Knowles's work is genuinely charming, but a show like this says as much about its curator as it does about its subject. Higgs and Gavin Brown's decision to pair Knowles's oeuvre with Jeremy Deller's Uses of Literacy, 1997--a project with which Higgs has also been involved featuring amateur artwork by fans of a Welsh band, the Manic Street Preachers--paints a picture of a curator on a quest, searching for authentic passion along the margins of an art world that craves extreme emotion yet remains squeamish squea·mish adj. 1. a. Easily nauseated or sickened. b. Nauseated. 2. Easily shocked or disgusted. 3. Excessively fastidious or scrupulous. about true love. |
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