The House of Dust

In 1967, Knowles, a Fluxus artist, composed one of the first computerized poems, written in Fortran code, with randomly assembled verses. (An example: “A house of steel / Among high mountains / Using candles / Inhabited by people who sleep almost all the time.”) This significant, jam-packed exhibition revives Knowles’s poem on an old-school dot-matrix printer, and includes related ephemera, including a film by Allan Kaprow. The show also highlights forebears of Knowles’s aleatory composition, with a never-completed book by Mallarmé whose pages could be reordered at will, as well as Marcel Broodthaer’s 1969 homage to it. There are also successors: Nicholas Knight’s intricate paintings of overlapping colored curves were generated by an algorithm, and Katarzyna Krakowiak’s audio piece remixes Knowles’s original poem into skittering musique concrète.

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Reflex/Reflection

2009

Tape

2011

Entr'acte

Entr'acte

2007

Crop Duster Octet

2011

Elbow (As Such)

Elbow (As Such)

1959

The Name is not the Thing named

The Name is not the Thing named

2010

Heineken

Heineken

2007

Envío 6

Envío 6

2007

Envío 22

Envío 22

2010

Envío 23

Envío 23

2010

Heim

2008

Der Schachtel

1968

Prelude

Prelude

Device

Device

1996

Belongings and Surroundings

Belongings and Surroundings

Stand Up and Be Counted

1969

A Sense of the Past

A Sense of the Past

1967

Welcome to Come

Welcome to Come

1968

Peripeteia I

Peripeteia I

1977

Peripeteia II

Peripeteia II

1978