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.

Loading countdown...
Black and White Tapes

Black and White Tapes

1975

Sauce

Sauce

1974

Satrapy

1988

Protective Coloration

Protective Coloration

1990

Untitled Mockumentary Comedy

Han (on the sun)

Han (on the sun)

1992

Ghost Sonata

Ghost Sonata

1982

All Smiles and Sadness

1999

Drawers

1975

Veil of Years

1977

You Speak of Flins

1969

The Mysteries

The Mysteries

1968

Big Black Square

Big Black Square

2005

Itch

Itch

1975

Head

1976

Some Friends

Some Friends

1973

Kaleidoskop-In 10 Minuten Licht

Kaleidoskop-In 10 Minuten Licht

2006

Purfled Promises

Norm

1988

Inadequateness of a shadow

Inadequateness of a shadow