Alison Knowles

Alison Knowles (born 1933) is an American visual artist known for her installations, performances, soundworks, and publications. Knowles was a founding member of the Fluxus movement, an international network of artists who aspired to merge different artistic media and disciplines. Criteria that have come to distinguish her work as an artist are the arena of performance, the indeterminacy of her event scores resulting in the deauthorization of the work, and the element of tactile participation. She graduated from Pratt Institute in New York with an honors degree in fine art. In May 2015, she was awarded an honorary doctorate degree by Pratt.[1]

Alison Knowles
Alison Knowles (right) performing one of her pieces on stage with her daughter Hannah Higgins at the Fluxus Semicentenary in San Francisco, CA in September, 2011
Born1933
NationalityAmerican
Known forPerformance art, Printmaking
MovementFluxus

In the 1960s, she was an active participant in New York City's downtown art scene, collaborating with influential artists such as John Cage and Marcel Duchamp. During this time she began producing event scores, or performances that rework the everyday into art. Knowles's inclusion of visual, aural, and tactile elements sets her art apart from the work of other Fluxus artists.

Personal life

Alison Knowles was married to Dick Higgins, a leading Fluxist who coined the term intermedia. She has two twin daughters, Jessica and Hannah Higgins. Jessica is a New York-based intermedia artist closely associated with seminal curator Lance Fung, late Fluxus gallerist Emily Harvey, and The International Artists' Museum's Construction in Process. Hannah Higgins is a writer, art historian, and professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Both daughters performed and collaborated in original Fluxus related events as youths. Knowles often does performance pieces with members of her family, including Loose Pages, Shoes Of Your Choice, and Beans All Day. Knowles lives and works from her loft in New York City's Soho district, where she was a homesteader beginning in the 1950s.[2]

Early work

Transferring from Middlebury College in Vermont, Knowles graduated from the Pratt Institute in 1956. Since her father was a professor at Pratt, she was able to enroll in the school at no cost. During night classes, Knowles studied painting with abstract expressionist Adolph Gottlieb. She admired Helen Frankenthaler and had acquaintance with the work of Jackson Pollock. Franz Kline also taught some of the painting courses. During the day, Knowles studied graphic design and commercial layout. A class taught by painter Richard Lindner proved very influential for Knowles. “What I learned there was that I am an artist. What I should have learned there is that I am not a painter,” said Knowles in a 2006 interview.[3]

In addition to her father, Knowles notes John Cage as another one of her mentors. She knew of Cage through one of his courses taught at the New School for Social Research in 1958. Many of the Fluxus leaders, such as Dick Higgins, George Brecht, Al Hansen and Allan Kaprow, took the historic class.[4] Knowles's focus in painting diminished after her show at the Nonegon Gallery in New York, in which she destroyed all of her works in a bonfire behind her brother's house.[2] This act of destruction led directly to her association with other types of work and eventually with Fluxus. On the first Fluxus tour in 1962, Knowles began to write event scores, which would quickly become a major aspect of the movement.[5]

After participating in the initial Fluxus Festivals in Europe from 1962 to 1963, Knowles returned to the United States and began making objects, some as Fluxus multiples commissioned by George Maciunas, the leader of the movement. Knowles's object-based pieces focus on the audience's tactile and audible interaction with the artwork. While her counterparts targeted the conventions of music, Knowles focused on poetry and the significance of spoken word. During the 1960s, she began to incorporate beans in her art, a common motif in her work. The bean was a unique object to use at a time when other Fluxus artists employed street detritus, readymades, and assemblage objects.

Book objects

With the invitation of Maciunas, Knowles produced one of her earliest book objects, the Bean Rolls (1963). UnIike a traditional bound volume, the pages of this work are tiny paper scrolls, which the reader may select and view in any order. On each scroll, Knowles printed found texts collected from songs, recipes, stories, science, cartoons, and advertisements. The tin also contains dried beans, which create a rattling sound as the container is handled. In the 1960s, Knowles expanded on this performative aspect of Bean Rolls by staging readings with multiple participants.

In 1967, Knowles created The House of Dust, known as the first computer-generated poem, a type of digital poetry, in collaboration with composer James Tenney. The poem began as a set of four lists written by Knowles. Selecting a phrase from each list would describe a house made of a certain material, in a particular location, illuminated by a light source, and sheltering various inhabitants.[6] She gave the lists to Tenney, who fed them into an early IBM program. The computer poem was written with the FORTRAN language and was included in the exhibition Cybernetic Serendipity. [7] The output yielded a permutation sequenced by chance. From roughly 10,000 possible stanzas, Knowles selected one quatrain—“a house of dust / on open ground / lit by natural light / inhabited by friends and enemies”—as the basis for an interactive sculpture on the California Institute of the Arts campus in the early 1970s.[8]

Knowles expanded the scale of her book projects with The Big Book (1967), a walk-in construction composed of eight moveable “pages,” each four feet wide by eight feet tall, anchored to a metal spine. Each page featured an access point leading to the next, forming different spaces and ways the reader could approach the book. The composition weighed about a ton, and contained a gallery, library, grass tunnel, and window. It was built using found materials such as a toilet, stove, and telephone from her apartment and studio, and could be packaged and shipped in two crates. The book traveled to cities in Canada, Europe, and the United States, gradually disintegrating into its individual components by the time it reached its final destination in San Diego, California. The Big Book inspired her other large-scale installations, The Book of Bean and The Boat Book. In addition to exploring the sculptural potential of a book, Knowles has also produced and written several books of experimental text and poetry.[9]

The Boat Book premiered at Art Basel in Miami in January 2014. Knowles said, "The grass tunnel will be replaced by a hoop structure between two pages covered with blue silk like the ocean." The "book sculpture," as she refers to it, also contains a porthole, fishing nets and a fishing pole, an anchor, and other accoutrements of water travel.[2]

Event scores

Event scores are performances invented by George Brecht, who was influenced by Cage's class in experimental composition. Many Fluxus works feature this minimalistic performance piece, which is often composed of simple instruction.[10] As Knowles puts it, an event score is “a one or two line recipe for action.” Knowles's The Identical Lunch[11] (1969) is one of her more well-known scores based on her habit of eating the same food, at the same time each day: “a tuna fish sandwich on wheat toast, with lettuce and butter, no mayo and a cup of soup or a glass of buttermilk.” The score supposedly began after Philip Corner, her friend and fellow Fluxus member, commented on her daily lunch routine at Riss Dinner in Chelsea, New York. Knowles decided to invite people to join her for lunch and to document all the nuances and repetitions. Repeating the gesture made the meal a self-conscious reflection on an everyday activity.[12] “It was about having an excuse to get to talk to people, to notice everything that happened, to pay attention,” said Knowles during her recent rendition of the event score at the Museum of Modern Art.[13]

The aspect of touch is a distinct element that sets Knowles apart from many other Fluxus artists. One of her most notable event scores, Make a Salad, was originally performed in 1962 at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. In this score, Knowles prepares a massive salad by chopping the vegetables to the beat of live music, mixing the ingredients by tossing it in the air, then serving the salad to the audience. Make a Salad has been performed at numerous venues around the world, including the Tate Modern, the High Line, the Walker Art Center, and most recently at Art Basel 2016.[14]

Shoes of Your Choice also debuted at the same time as Make a Salad at the ICA. For Shoes of Your Choice, Knowles asks the participants to simply describe the shoes they are wearing. In 2011, Knowles performed Shoes of Your Choice[15] and other works for President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama in "A Celebration of American Poetry at the White House" alongside Billy Collins, the hip-hop actor and poet Common, Elizabeth Alexander, Rita Dove and Kenneth Goldsmith.[16]

Soundworks

Knowles has been active in sound since the late 1960s. In 1969, Knowles designed and co-edited John Cage's Notations, a book of music manuscripts published by the Something Else Press. Her Bean Garden, first presented at the Annual Avant Garde Festival of New York, consists of a large amplified platform covered with beans. Most recently reconstructed for the Alison Knowles exhibition at the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Bean Garden invites visitors to walk through the platform, allowing the sounds of the beans to resonate with each step.[17] Knowles has also created a series of sounded objects, including the bean turner (a handcrafted flax paper pouch filled with beans), wrist rubbers (flax paper “gloves” embedded with beans), and a bamboo and flax accordion.[18] Knowles's interest in the sounds produced by beans was explored in a series of four radio programs hosted by the German station Westdeutscher Rundfunk, whose director was a friend and supporter of John Cage. In 1982, Knowles was awarded the prestigious Karl Sczuka Award for best radio work from WDR for her event score, Bean Sequences.

Prints

Although she changed direction as her interest in performance developed, Knowles began producing silkscreen paintings shown at the Judson Gallery in the early 1960s. From 1963 until the mid-1970s, print functioned as an expression of her other process-based concerns. In 1963, she collaborated with Cage students Robert Watts and George Brecht in the Scissors Brothers Warehouse show, commonly referred to as BLINK for the bold word that appears in the center. This eighteen-inch square print consisted of three images chosen at random, one selected by each artist. The image appeared on everything from canvases to bathing suits and hairbrushes, and were all sold at flea markets. Knowles produced the Identical Lunch graphic series, which showcases her friends and Fluxus colleagues consuming The Identical Lunch, during the early 1970s.[19]

In the late 1960s, Knowles worked closely with Marcel Duchamp to recreate his first optical piece, the Coeurs Volants. The original was made in 1936 for the Cahiers d'Art, a French artistic and literary journal. Initially, Knowles wanted the rights to reproduce the image for the cover of a Something Else Press publication (featuring Emmett Williams's concrete poem Sweethearts).[20] However, upon meeting in person, it was decided that she would create a new silkscreen of the work. Knowles visited the apartment of Marcel and Teeny Duchamp to choose color samples for the reprint. After a miscommunication, Duchamp jokingly signed one of the swatches in pencil, arguably creating his last readymade.[8]

Awards

Knowles has been acknowledged for her profound contributions to contemporary art in the forms of a Guggenheim Grant (1967), NEA Grants (1981 and 1985), a collaborative New York State Council on the Arts Grant (1989), a Dokumenta Professorship at the Kunstakademie Kassel, Germany (1998), the College Art Association Lifetime Achievement Award (2003), and Anonymous was a Woman Grant (2003). In 2015 Knowles was selected by the art historian Claire Bishop to receive a Francis J. Greenburger Award, which go to under-recognized artists every two years.[21]

gollark: Let's all move to Minetest!
gollark: I don't like it, mostly just because wood, but it does look quite nice.
gollark: Just hold it.
gollark: <@409887156673183754> Why assume it was me, anyway? I've not been on in four days.
gollark: I didn't.

References

  1. "Pratt Institute | News | Honorary Degree Recipients and Speakers Announced for Commencement on May 15".
  2. Bloch, Mark. "The Boat Book by Alison Knowles" White Hot Magazine. http://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/boat-book-alison-knowles/3113. January 2014.
  3. Janssen, Ruud. "Interview with Alison Knowles" (PDF). www.fluxusheidelberg.org. Fluxus Heidelberg Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
  4. Higgins, Hannah (December 2002). Fluxus Experience. University of California Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780520228672.
  5. Bloch, Mark "What Did Raynaud and When Did He Know It? An Interview with Alison Knowles" Black Mountain College Studies Journal Vol. 8. http://www.blackmountainstudiesjournal.org/volume-8-special-surprise-issue-summer-2015/what-did-raynaud-and-when-did-he-know-it-interview-with-alison-knowles-by-mark-bloch/
  6. Taylor, Scott. "Alison Knowles, James Tenney and the House of Dust at CalArts". Retrieved 12 July 2016.
  7. Sutton, Gloria. "Stan VanDerBeek’s Poemfields: The Interstice of Cinema and Computing." In Mainframe Experimentalism: Early Computing and the Foundations of the Digital Arts, edited by Hannah Higgins and Douglas Kahn (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2012), 330.
  8. Woods, Nicole L. (2012). "Object/Poems: Alison Knowles's Feminist Archite(x)ture". X-TRA. 15 (1).
  9. Knowles, Alison (January 1, 2013). The Big Book. Passenger Books. ISBN 978-3940215130.
  10. Higgins, Hannah (December 2002). Fluxus Experience. University of California Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780520228672.
  11. "Performance 10: Alison Knowles". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
  12. Higgins, Hannah (December 2002). Fluxus Experience. University of California Press. pp. 47–48. ISBN 9780520228672.
  13. Kennedy, Randy (2011-02-02). "Art at MoMA: Tuna on Wheat (Hold the Mayo)". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  14. Neuendorf, Henri (2016-04-28). "Better Bring a Fork to Art Basel, Because Alison Knowles Will Make You a Salad". news.artnet.com. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
  15. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-68Z708lFsY
  16. "A Celebration of American Poetry at the White House". 2011-05-11.
  17. "Alison Knowles at CMOA". press.cmoa.org. CMOA. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  18. "Paper Instruments". Alison Knowles. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
  19. Higgins, Hannah (December 2002). Fluxus Experience. University of California Press. pp. 138–139. ISBN 9780520228672.
  20. Dyment, Dave (2012-06-02). "Something Else Press: Duchamp's Coeurs Volants". Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  21. Greenberger, Alex. "Collector’s Corner: Francis Greenburger," ARTNews. Posted 08/31/15. www.artnews.com/2015/08/31/collectors-corner-francis-greenburger/
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