Artist Talk: November 19, 5:30pm
Opening Reception to follow.
We are pleased to present Brian Knep’s second solo exhibition at the judi rotenberg gallery. Including video
and photography, Knep’s show is an extension of a body of work that he continues to develop through his
residency at the Harvard Medical School.
Through the scientific study of microscopic worms, Knep engages metaphysical questions of human
behavior, the passage time, and our inevitable transition to death. Knep’s study of the Caenorhabditis
elegans, was inspired by the studies being conducted by scientists at the Harvard lab, specifically the study of
aging, or the “disintegration of information” as it is formally known. However, while Knep applies learned
methods of research, he departs from the dogma of science, and adopts a more human approach to the topic
of aging. He is intrigued by the limitations of science, the inability of such a brilliant system to carry us closer
to understanding human existence.
We seek salvation in science, hoping to ease our fears – afraid of pain, we research disease; afraid of death
we research aging – yet pain is inevitable and life is impermanent. Behind much of my work is a desire to
address these conflicting themes by using the tools of science and engineering to make works about
connection and change.
Knep’s project with the microscopic worms has moved from observation and study to creating contexts for the
worms to travel through. He is fabricating environments, such as microscopic labyrinths, to alter their course
and, in essence, intercede with the species himself. As his project develops, the worms are not only
metaphors, but subjects whose patterns can be adjusted. Knep is offering new avenues for them to explore,
creating a more direct relationship between the artist and his subject.
The exhibition will include high-resolution images and video, which are captured using custom computer
vision and image-processing techniques. Knep’s imagery morphs between abstract forms and more defined
subjects, at times, appearing as if nature is imitating art.
Knep has previously exhibited related work from his research at the Harvard Medical School at the judi rotenberg
gallery in 2007, for which he won the IBM Boston Cyberarts Innovation Award, Miami Basel with Ron Feldman Fine
Arts, Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art in Peekskill, NY, and the McColl Center for the Arts in Charlotte,
NC. Knep graduated with honors from Brown University, where he studied computer-science and mathematics and
received his BFA and his Masters. He has exhibited at numerous institutions including, Milwaukee Art Museum,
DeCordova Museum, Montserrat College of Art, McColl Center for Visual Art, Tufts University, and Harvard
University. He has also exhibited internationally, including University of Otago, New Zealand, Art Rock, France,
Mobile Art, Sweden, ARCO, Spain, SSEF and Insa Art Center, Korea. He has received numerous awards including
LEF Foundation Grant, IBM Innovation Award, AICA/New England Award, Creative Capital Foundation, Rockefeller
Foundation New Media Fellowship Finalist, and Academy Award, Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences.
|