Kris Knight

Kris Knight is a Canadian artist based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Knight's works are mostly portraits; Knight wanted to draw the human face as a child and it continues to be the main thing that he focuses on painting as an adult.[1] Each one of Knight's series of work is stemmed from his autobiographical memory.[1][2][3] He works at a downtown Toronto studio that he shares with illustrator Winnie Truong.[4]

Kris Knight
Born1980
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
NationalityCanadian
EducationOntario College of Art and Design
Known forPainting
Websitekrisknight.com

Life and career

Knight was born in Windsor, Ontario in 1980, and moved to Toronto in 1999 for art school.[5] Knight has three other siblings.[3] Growing up in a bakery, where his mother worked as a baker, Knight's pastel palette was influenced by his experiences tinting icing used for baked goods. Knight mixed his color palette by using the technique bakers use to make cake icings - by starting off with a white base and later adding the tint.[2] Knight has described himself as having an awkward and shy personality.[1] Knight's parents gave art supplies as Knight's birthday and Christmas present since he was young, seeing that he had an interest in art.[2][3] Knight received his degree in 2003, majoring in Painting and Drawing from the Ontario College of Art and Design (AOCAD), with a minor in Curating and Criticism. In most of Knight's twenties, he worked in art galleries during the day and restaurants at night.[3]

Knight's works are represented by Katharine Mulherin in Toronto, Spinello Gallery in Miami and Galerie Alain Gutharc in Paris.[4][6] He claimed that he paints everyday but destroy half of his work.[3]

Knight's work was hand-picked by fashion designer Christian Lacroix to be part of a group exhibition, Carte Blanche a Christian Lacroix, at Musée Cognacq-Jay in Paris in November 2014. His work was featured alongside other contemporary artists who are inspired by the 18th century.[4][7]

Works

18th century styles painting like Romanticism, Symbolism, Sturm und Drang, and Rococo have influenced Knight's work.[2] Drawn to the ghostly look of French 17th century portraiture(Baroque) because of the 'heavy white powder make-up that was in vogue at the time', Knight cited the pastels used in the work of Joseph Ducreux and Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun as an influence.[1][3][6] Knight often mute the skin tones of his palette so that the characters of his paintings appear powdered and slightly translucent. Obsessed with the French Revolution since he was a kid, having always been inspired by folklore, myth, secrets, gossip, fashion and historical costumes.[8] The works of Thomas Lawrence, John Singer Sargent, Nicolas Poussin, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, and Thomas Gainsborough has influenced Kris Knight as well.[2]

The majority of Knight's characters are based on real people, mostly his close friends and family, but sometimes collaged images culled from mass media, self-portraits, and his imagination.[2][3][6][9] Knight's subjects have mostly been young men or androgynous men, admitting that he has a fascination with "youth decay" - of holding on to one's youth:"Our society focuses so much on youth as the pinnacle of beauty that we become poisoned by the obsession of preserving what is naturally fleeting."[1] Knight attributed his love of naming "cheesy subversive title" to his paintings to growing up gay in "unromantic, small farming towns in rural Canada".[6][9] He also compared the titles of his paintings to "someone making a bad joke to cheer [the viewer] up" because he found most of his paintings have a sad atmosphere.[3]

The Lost and Found (2012)

In paintings like Mischief, Caught and My Porcelain Life, characters in the portraits are wearing masks. Knight stated that the group of paintings are about "a group of disenchanted youths who subtly play with roles of being the hunter and the hunted. As much as the characters in these paintings try to be lost, they are very much aware of who is watching them." Knight said that the characters are often wearing elements of protection—sweaters, furs, masks—that are "too delicate to protect or hide anything", Knight wanted his characters to be "as guarded as they are vulnerable". He examined the emotional state of what it is like to feel lost and how the characters return to where they were. The series was Knight's response to feeling "a bit burnt out" from deadlines.[6]

Secrets Are Things We Grow (2013)

Knight said that "within these portraits are elements of the garden and exercises in pattern work representing how secrets are rooted and grow with time. Other paintings note the bonds formed when secrets are revealed to those we hold closest."[10] Knight elaborates, "Within these portraits are elements of the garden and exercises in pattern work representing how secrets are rooted and grow with time. Other paintings note the bonds formed when secrets are revealed to those we hold closest."

Smell The Magic (2014)

The exhibition was first exhibited at Gucci’s Art Basel event at Spinello Project’s pop-up gallery in Wynwood, Florida,sponsored by the Italian fashion house Gucci.[11][12] Because of the exhibit location in Miami, Knight was inspired to use brighter colors in this body of work, saying that some of his new paintings are deliberately tropical but in an awkward "northerner's first day in the tropics" kind of way. Some figures of the paintings have Ouija board pointers for eyes, others have blossoms painted on their faces.[1]

Gucci Collaboration

In January 2014, a friend notified Knight that his painting's pastel color palette was listed as a color inspiration for Gucci's men's ready-to-wear fall/winter 2014 collection.[1][13] The collaboration began a month late after the event, with Knight being invited to Rome to meet Gucci's creative director Frida Giannini, a fan of Knight's works, and her team to rework Gucci's iconic Flora print.[1] The original floral print, commissioned by Rodolfo Gucci to Vittorio Accornero in 1966, was applied on a silk scarf as a gift to Princess Grace of Monaco on her trip to the brand's store in Via Monte Napoleone with her husband Prince Rainier.[13][14]

In Knight's reimagining of Gucci's Flora design, Knight referenced ancient pagan Rome; he illustrated plants that women used for healing (poppy, henbane, mandrake); seduction (belladonna, datura); and protection (clover, dandelion, and nightshade), he envisioned for a design that is 'strong, feminine, magical and quietly dangerous'. Knight picked botanicals that either blossomed at night, dawn or dusk but also chose plants that have strong roots for adaptability, persistence and resistance in harsh environments.[2][14] Knight also cited singer Marianne Faithfull as a muse for the project after spotting a photo of the singer on Gucci’s mood board.[4] The resulted work was applied to a variety of Giannini's design for Gucci's Cruise 2015 season.[11][12][15] Giannini played the song Blue Neck Rivierathe from the Montreal band No Joy album, one of the thank-you gifts Knight gave her, for one of her runway shows.[15][16] Vogue editor Anna Wintour was photographed in a dress featuring Knight’s motif.

Notes and references

  1. Duran, Jose D. "The Magic of Kris Knight: "I Never Get Tired of Painting the Face"". Miami New Times. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  2. Giannini, Frida. "Kris Knight". Interview Magazine. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  3. Bruce, Parker. "Meet Kris Knight". Gayletter. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  4. Habib, Samra (September 29, 2014). "Kris Knight: The Canadian painter who inspired Gucci's fall men's collection". Globe Style Advisor (October 2014). The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  5. "Toronto artist Kris Knight descends on Miami's Art Basel". CBC News. CBC/Radio-Canada. December 2, 2014. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  6. Yeapanis, Stacia. "OtherPeoplesPixels Interviews Kris Knight". Other People Pixels. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  7. Kilroy, Richard. "Kris Knight". Decoy Magazine. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  8. "Kris Knight". Rize Gallery. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  9. Harrity, Christopher. "Artist Spotlight: Kris Knight". The Advocate. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  10. Pantazi, Chloe. "Portraits of Men Who Have Things to Hide". The Atlantic. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  11. Baig, Nishat. "Kris Knight's "Smell The Magic" Pop-Up Exhibit Debuts At Art Basel". The Source. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  12. Dunne, Carey. "The Dreamlike Paintings That Inspire Gucci's Creative Director". Fast Co. Design. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  13. Kong, Daniel (November 26, 2014). "Dark Side of the Bloom". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  14. "Flora by Kris Knight - Cruise 2015". Gucci. Archived from the original on 21 September 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  15. Binlot, Ann. "Gucci's Frida Giannini and Kris Knight Kick Off a Week of Parties at Art Basel in Miami Beach". Style.com. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  16. "No Joy". Interactive Roots. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
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