The first solo museum exhibition of Karla Knight's decades-long career debuts a new body of work
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The first solo museum exhibition of Karla Knight's decades-long career debuts a new body of work
Karla Knight: Navigator (installation view, left, Wayfinder 1; center, Wayfinder 2; right, Wayfinder 3, 2020), The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, October 17, 2021 to May 8, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York. Photo: Jason Mandella.



RIDGEFIELD, CONN.- The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum is presenting Navigator, the first solo museum exhibition of Karla Knight (b. 1958). Knight has spent the last forty years creating an impressive body of work that spans painting, drawing, and photography. After regularly exhibiting in New York City in the 1980s, Knight moved to New Mexico in 1994. She returned to the East coast in 2000, settling in Redding, CT in 2003 where she has lived and worked for nearly twenty years. This exhibition is a focused survey charting the development of a far-seeing language over a four-decade career and debuts a new body of work. Navigator is on view at The Aldrich until May 8, 2022.

Knight’s imagery is steeped in science, the occult, early twentieth century abstraction, Surrealism, and Native American art. And yet, her visual language is purposefully impenetrable—she offers no clues or methods to its decoding. For her, its true meaning must remain unnamed, as it is ultimately inspired by “the mysteries and absurdities of life.” As she asserts, “It’s not about deciphering the work or the language. It’s about living with the unknown.”

Her dense paintings and works on paper swirl with graphic shapes, diagrams, and ciphers that appear both archaic and space aged. The exhibition at The Aldrich tracks the vast range and evolution of Knight’s pictographic lexicon—the spaceships, floating orbs, and eyeballs, as well as the hieroglyphic-like lists, charts, codes, alphabets, and other invented symbols—that embody these all-over compositions. Similar to the trailblazing abstract artist Hilma af Klint (1862–1944) and the far-sighted symbolist Agnes Pelton (1881–1961), Knight’s enigmatic image databank channels a passionate engagement with spiritual and nonphysical realms.

The exhibition also debuts a new body of work, what the artist refers to as “tapestries.” Using reclaimed cotton cut from c. 1940s–50s seed and grain bags purchased on eBay, Knight sews pieces together to form patchwork compositions. Unstretched, she draws and paints directly on the surface with flashe, colored pencil, and graphite, while hand-embroidering select sections. The grounds exhibit signs of staining and mending, visual markers left from their previous life-use.

Karla Knight (b. 1958, New York, NY) lives and works in Redding, CT. Her work has been exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions and is represented in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Brooklyn Museum, the Walker Art Center, and the Emily Fisher Landau Collection, among others. She has been the recipient of various awards and fellowships including MacDowell, New Hampshire; Yaddo, Saratoga Springs, NY; and two Connecticut Artist fellowships.

The artist’s first museum publication,with an essay by Amy Smith-Stewart, the exhibition’s curator, accompanies the show.

Organized by Amy Smith-Stewart, Senior Curator, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum.










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