Showing posts with label Carla Knopp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carla Knopp. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The Art of Carla Knopp - Part Five


Mount Q, Carla Knopp


Bodies of Art.

Over the course of several years in the late 2000s and 2010s, the artwork of Carla Knopp will continue to change and evolve, and reform altogether. Looking at the paintings she created and displayed at her most important local shows from about a decade between 2008 and 2016, we cannot help but see cohesive and distinct periods – bodies of work. 

Each show, a body of her oeuvre, laid bare like the naked protagonist in her early painting 6 AM Drug Test from 1990 (see in Part Two).  Each new exhibition, a journal of picaresque experiences  and intuitive thought experiments jotted down with paint. 

Her shows are particularly effective in their cohesive visual storytelling. Just as an exotic vacation locale cannot be expressed by a single selfie snapshot, Knopp's aesthetic vision is best viewed not in individual pieces, but by immersion among a group. She seems conscious of this as she prepares her bodies of art during these years.

Looking at a picture in any of the shows, and then stepping back for the grander vista of a group, Knopp's paintings can be seen as a document of a temporal journey. A once-upon-a-time journey of struggles and achievements that reveal a balance between two great artistic rationales for painting itself; the traditional motive of creating a picture, and the more modern approach to moving paint around. 

And there are more fundamental dichotomies at play in her painted tales; action versus analysis, spontaneity vicarious to reflection, inferno vis-a-vis paradiso.

Knopp creates in that elbow, that wedge between obvious sides; each visionary idea a  coiled fulcrum ready to spring from competing currents and battling impulses. In-between places and tug-of-wars don't seem to bother her a bit.

It is a journey that will lead toward a magnum opus of a new direction – her eventual immersion into the  universe of electronic art. But the painting shows of the new century come first and herald the way. 


Magic Mountains and Torrents of Magma.

With the unveiling of each successive exhibition, we peek into Knopp's uniquely personal artistic eras that define themselves and reveal their self-contained visuality

Her painted ideas are often conceptually dense, but painted with a light and and spontaneous touch, surprising and refreshing – interestingly idiosyncratic – as has become a signature attribute of the artist by this time.

Each show of pictures, a sumptuous feast of harmonious courses – each with a seemingly shared, or at least related, topography and flora.  Sometimes there is a hint of fauna. And when there are the imprints of a civilization present, they are symbiotic to the scene in ways that do not mar, but merge with the landscapes she creates. If buildings appear, they are like Frank Lloyd Wrights that meld into the surrounding environment with their modesty of color and silhouette. And then there are the  strange, being-made structures, are often organic, curving and biomorphic, with an effect of unsettling beauty.




In October 2008, Knopp's show Mounts was exhibited at 4 Star Gallery on Massachusetts Avenue. 

The exhibition includes two larger landscape format works and a series of smaller square paintings. The larger works were reviewed by Dan Grossman writing in NUVO Newsweekly on November 9, 2009, as follows,

“The title Love Hovel, Barkshed Recreational Area may seem to indicate a real place name but the ethereal setting of this painting doesn't quite seem to resemble the title in any literal sense...

Knopp said she found the title for this piece after its composition, during a Google search that – like the composition process itself – was an intuitive one.”

Of the smaller Mounts series in the show and the other larger work, Grossman writes,

“All of the paintings in this show, including the oil on panel Mounts series, were painted intuitively. Correspondingly, they are less focused on representing any particular thing and more about the creative process itself. All, that is, except for Morning on Earth. By virtue of its stunning depiction of a blue shoreline and looping arches under a lightening sky, this painting captures the ephemeral  beauty of the world we live in.” 



Morning on Earth, Carla Knopp, from the exhibit Mounts


As mentioned earlier in this series, the Morning on Earth theme would be a recurring motif for the artist over the course of her ongoing career, beginning in the early 1990s. Whereas an earlier painting by that name presented a desolate landscape of acrid colors, savage clear-cut vegetation, and the deadpan inclusion of an alarm clock as pun, the  identically titled work in the Mounts show depicts a surreal landscape of some earth-analog, habitable-zone exoplanet somewhere in the universe, with aqua-colored waters, foggy pink skies, tendriling vegetation and frozen molten points of emerging rock spotting the planet's surface from foreground to the deep receding distance.

This world's morning could be the electron miscroscopic image of any old thing, looked at so close as to become  frightening and familiar in equal part, like a Jurassic Park gnat, or the bristling somethings that cover the face of a fly. 

Or maybe, if the intuitive spark of thought, dancing among dendrites, could be seen, we are seeing it in this Earth morning by Knopp.



Mount B, Carla Knopp


The Mounts series of smaller square works are titled simply as Mount from A to Z.  In all these works, Knopp paints sculptural, center-composed forms of emerging rocky peaks. In Mount A, Mount B and Mount Q, the rugged spires are topped with gem-like capstones or with glass-like orbs atop the craggy, pustular mounts. 

Each erupting image is a Devil's Tower of geological wonder amid soft-focused landscapes of muted, barely-pastel skies and sfumato rolling hills.



Mount U, Carla Knopp


In Mount U, a more sinister bristle of seemingly sexual thrust is depicted.  The gray-orb at the peak of this mount is collared by a ring of thorns like a sprig of spikes on a honey locust tree. 

Knopp would next exhibit new oil paintings at Harrison Center in Indianapolis in April 2010. The show called Spawn was covered in a detailed feature article by Mary Lee Pappas appearing in The Indianapolis Star on April 9. 



In the article, Pappas covers Knopp's career of late, her processes and techniques, and her works in the latest show,

“In 2009, Knopp exhibited in New York and was featured in New American Paintings, a juried magazine. Later this spring, she has a show at the Russell/Projects gallery in Virginia.

Knopp's narrative works (in Spawn), which are executed on pod-shaped, non-symmetrical wood panels – some as large as 5 feet in diameter – exude an organic, feminine feel.

Taking an intentionally naive approach, Knopp has allowed herself to paint without inhibition. The results are a testament to her marked skills as a painter."

(Pappas then quotes Knopp) 

" 'There's kind of a spawning in the creative process, so it's  a very general term that just happens to work well with the imagery...

I just let myself paint circles, as many as I wanted...I just went ahead and let it happen.' ”



Bridething (or Bride Thing), Carla Knopp


Spawn was also reviewed by Dan Grossman in NUVO Newsweekly on April 15, 2010, where he writes,

Estrogenie, Ripwreath and Bride Thing are some of the more interesting titles/coinages in this show of Carla Knopp's new paintings. Bride Thing is Knopp's depiction of a sort of wedding bouquet with greenish leaves and towers of red eyeball-like things protruding from it against a flesh-colored background. It's not exactly the kind of thing you'd want to see at your wedding but you have to at least admire the craftsmanship behind it. 

Knopp's new paintings are on planes of wood...that she shaped and sanded herself. She takes full advantage of the shapes of her wood surfaces, ovals and pentagons among them, to frame her intuitive compositions.” 



Royal Toddler, Carla Knopp


Looking now at the piece Royal Toddler, we see the overall outline of the wood panel shaped in the five lazy curves of a bloated star or portly gingerbread man. Inside the confines of the picture border, is an emergent revolving process of extrusion, rotation, formation and  dissimulation. The pushing and pulling of color and form, along with the title, allude an ultrasound of an imperial fetus – with a fourth-dimensional zygote's-eye view of becoming.  We see inside and outside, tossing and turning, past, present and future, all at once.   


Evolutionary Leftovers.

In November 2011, a new venue for downtown artists opened with an expansion in the Circle City Industrial Complex on Brookside Avenue. 

Called the South Studios, the new area of the 13 acre complex hosted artists' studios and exhibition spaces. 

Tenants included a founding catalyst in Lug Waku and his 'Studio & Garage' space, painter/sculptor Matthew Davey and Carla Knopp with her new Dewclaw Gallery.     

Knopp presented Lane Markers, a new series of paintings, in Dewclaw's first show, which was reviewed by Dan Grossman in NUVO on December 6, 2012. He begins his remarks with comments about the meaning of the gallery's name and its relation to a particular painting,

“A mammalian dewclaw may be vestigial, but it is not without interest  from an evolutionary perspective. Accordingly, Carla Knopp's Lane Markers paintings...ruminate on vestigiality, on functionlessness.

Take, for example, Lastrada Estates, where you see termite-mound-like edifices in the foreground. What could they be for, we wonder...

...once you get past the...foreground, there's more to puzzle over. The Estates of this painting, a series of low-slung buildings in the background, could be trailers or mausoleums or something in between...

In...(this) oil on linen (painting) – as well as in the rest of the series – the muted pinks and earth tones contribute to an overall hypnotic effect enhanced by...the metallic ground they are painted on.”   

Another painting in the show is one that I collected from the exhibition at the time – Obifia Forest



Obifia Forest, Carla Knopp


The picture is an oil on linen fantasy landscape. A bare dirt road, glowing and gold, lined with mossy rocks on the way to a deep woods. Aside this path, some  unknown structures, one like a leaning gazebo or carousel... 

These human handiworks almost fade into a mist of atmosphere despite the highlights on their fanciful fretwork.

Overall, the painting is a tonal study in brown gold metallic and green. It's like a copper corrosion memory patina that brings to mind calliope music and antique Victorian postcards yellowing in the attic.

Dewclaw would go on to host additional exhibits by Knopp including her paintings in Kinkade Meets Turner Paints Sci-Fi With Fanbrush in 2012 and other solo shows by artists including Anita Giddings, Richard Nickolson, George Meluch, Kamilah Gill and Brian Fick over the course of the gallery's run. And the space would also later present tribute exhibitions for Jan Scott Boyer and Greg Brown.


A Somber Respite in Soothing Monochromes.

A late major show of Carla Knopp painted works would also occur at the Circle Center Industrial Complex South Studios in 2016.

In a series of same-sized, small pictures called Foodbox Portals, Knopp paints refrigerators as abstract  off-white rectangles blending into minimalist backgrounds of gray and/or brown hazes. The diffuse and dreamy shapes remind of Rothko and his existentialist era.

Knopp presents the old ice box, not as a comfort food custodian stuffed with flavor and delight, but as forlorn doorways to quiet, fading memories – coffin-like vestiges of ancient ads, dust-colored, in stone. 

If Samuel Beckett wrote copy for Frigidaire for the Pharaohs, you'd get a picture of the bleak dearth of Knopp's desolate appliance portraits.



Foodbox 15, Carla Knopp


These interesting and difficult works were reviewed by Dan Grossman in NUVO in the September 7, 2016 issue. He described several of the works in detail and some of his impressions are as follow,

“Let's just say that none of the refrigerators depicted here seem to be brand, spanking new, fresh out of the showroom. Foodbox 21 depicts a refrigerator that seems to be swallowed by the wall behind it, covered with multiple layers of decayed paint...Foodbox 22 resembles more a tombstone on a hill – a brown tombstone on a brown hill surrounded by brown sky...Foodbox 9 looks like what an abstract painting might look like if it were painted by Francis Bacon, in its brooding color choices, in its tarry accumulations of black paint. And Foodbox 24 doesn't really look like a food box – or a portal – at all. With its pink off-white color and a slit that verges on the vaginal, it looks like more like an animal carcass on a butcher's table.”



Foodbox 24, Carla Knopp


It might be fitting these paintings serve as a symbolic endpoint for the long analogue phase of Knopp's art career in Indianapolis. And perhaps a portal to what was to follow and continues to this day. 


You Can't Put Oil Paint Back in the Tube.

The output of Carla Knopp would not slow down in the ensuing years. Although the numbers of her purely physical painting would diminish, she would reincorporate her ideas in new directions. 

Her familiar obsessions would spawn and emerge again in her virtual reality arts which compel her creation now.

Her latest work consists of 3d spaces, or worlds, that must be experienced 'in-game' in the full reality of their VR splendor to be fully appreciated (some links below).  



La Loma, Carla Knopp, v
irtual world screen capture



Entering these worlds, traversing their terrain, teleporting through passageways, standing in grand halls... 

There is a feeling of both déjà vu and discovery. 

A thread of a whispering song weaves through all of Knopp's art, and remains in her latest virtual works, composed on the computer in a series of zeroes and ones, that when shuffled and compiled, and sorted just so, organize the impossible –  nothing and something – into scenes of an inexplicable everything.  

Her paintings serve as a diagram of future dreams, Frankensteined to life via microchips and computer code. 

A Morning on Earth that never ends, but cycles endlessly like energy in space.  

What were once pictures on a wall,  are now a hyperdrive of energized frozen moments – millions of flickering movies, on zillions of scrying screens –  an art befitting our new electronic era.  

But unlike AI, which is a rehash of everything that came before, at least at the time of this writing and until the singularity, Knopp uses modern technology like the Impressionists used the marvelous invention of oil colors in portable tubes. 

And for what particular reason is Knopp's to know and her artworks to allude.  

The modern artists' code is to break new ground, to go where no one has gone before. Try as you may, progress cannot march in reverse. Like the Impressionists with their new-fangled tubes. Hi ho, hi ho, from inside to outside they go. From studio to field, to capture the ever changing Earth.



Morning on Earth, Carla Knopp, virtual world screen capture


See Also:






Mark Diekhoff, June 2026


for Mitchell E. Marlow, 1964-2026, neverending laughter and friend for life 


The material used in this article is being used under the fair use provisions of copyright law. The content is being used for educational purposes only, and all rights to the original content are held by their respective copyright owners. We do not claim ownership of any copyrighted material used in this work.


Friday, May 8, 2026

The Art of Carla Knopp - Part Four


Corporeality, Carla Knopp, 1999


Avenue of Lost and Change.

By 1995, the downtown Indianapolis gallery scene was evolving. Places were closing and places were opening on Massachusetts Avenue. Re-locations were occurring away from that Avenue to Vermont Street and Alabama Avenue. Two large art enclaves, also downtown, were gaining steam nearby with the Stutz Building to the west and the Faris Building to the south.

As Carla Knopp continued her decade-long art journey through a changing art world, Steve Mannheimer reflected on the same prior ten years of the downtown Indianapolis art scene up to that point in the mid '90s. His observations were contained in the preamble to his review of two shows opening in April 1995, one of which was at Utrillo Gallery, an upstart space owned and ran by Greg Brown on the city's Near Eastside. 

The column's title was Local art scene is still jumping but not on Mass Ave and appeared in the April 9, 1995, Indianapolis Star. 

In just a few opening paragraphs, he described the state of the city's contemporary art scene of the prior ten years,

“During the last half of the 1980s, the health of the local art scene was gauged by the traffic through the galleries along Massachusetts Avenue. Opening night block parties did not always generate sales, but the masses on Mass. Ave. created the perception that art was...indispensable...

There was even a sort of local 'school' …, particularly the younger painters, who exhibited on Massachusetts.

It never attained nor aspired to the status of an official Indianapolis style – but...(this group) reinforced some mutual tendencies, toward painterly technique, vaguely disquieting content and a distant kinship to the expressionistic tone of the national scene of the day.

Some of the those galleries have disappeared. Others have evolved. Artists who had hoped those bubbly times would elevate their careers have been mostly disappointed.” 

The savvy real estate entrepreneurs and developers had a master plan as early as their first lease on that street to Patrick King in 1983, as covered earlier in this blog.  That plan was coming to fruition. It was a common multi-stage plan of gentrification using art and artists as the fuel, an early catalyst, and, like a rocket ship, when the boost of the first stage was spent, they would be shed away, cast off by stratospheric rent hikes, and abandoned to float or sink.




Essential, Folk, Outsider and Found.

So amid the change of this period, Greg Brown's Utrillo Gallery opened in 1995.  It would be an important venue for the work of Carla Knopp.

The location at 2630 East 10th Street was in an untapped art area of the Near Eastside.  

According to a March 16, 1997, Indianapolis Star feature article about him and his gallery by S. L. Berry,  Brown described the plentiful storefronts and cheap rents, and saw not only a prime location for his gallery, but for a future alternative scene to add to Mass Ave area and the loft buildings. 

An early and essential show at Utrillo was covered by Steve Mannheimer in the April 9, 1995, Indianapolis Star mentioned above.  

That show, World in Balance was an exhibition that,

“...features a dozen or so mobiles and collages by Indianapolis artist Gwendolyn Skaggs...

Gravity provides the only glue. Everything is suspended by a thread or loose wire and hangs together only by the grace of a still room...

Skaggs likes the precariousness of it all."

Mannheimer then quotes the artist and concludes his thoughts, 

" 'For each of these objects there is only one direction and one position in which it can hang. It fits my concept of living.'

...Skaggs has created a complete aesthetic: Her method is her metaphor – and vice versa.”

Brown would operate at that location for a couple of years, and then would move locations by 1998 to a building at 3318 East 10th Street. 



2630 East 10th Street as it appears today,
location of first Utrillo Gallery

Utrillo's would present what may be the most eclectic range of art and artists in the city during those times, with shows that included the intriguingly titled Sgt. Joe Griffith's Paintings of: The Kennedy Assassination in February 1998, a show of his own paintings called Cardboard and Canvas a few months later, as well as found art, folk art and thrift store art over the following months and years. 

Artists, in addition to Carla Knopp, included the quasi-outsider, Harry Blomme, and the iconoclastic self-proclaimed Allist, Jan Scott Boyer.  




In a 1998 exhibition, Utrillo Gallery presented Passionate Visions: Contemporary Folk Art of the South, selections from the personal collection of Robert Dawson, an IUPUI media studies teacher. 

S.L. Berry of the Indianapolis Star would preview the show in a Visual Arts column on July 21 of that year.

The writer described paintings as the primary focus of Dawson's collection, quoting the collector as follows,

“I especially like memory paintings...things that people paint later in their lives when they're recalling events or experiences or places in their past.”  

Berry also quotes Greg Brown about the show,

“The fine art community and the folk art community are starting to understand one another. This show is a conduit for furthering that.”

In March of 1999, Utrillo Gallery would exhibit the found-object creations of homeless outsider, William Talley. Later that same year in August, Greg Brown would exhibit his own collection of thrift shop prints and copies by French street scene painter, Maurice Utrillo, the inspirational namesake of his gallery.     

Carla Knopp would exhibit at Utrillo Gallery on several occasions, with painting shows including Villages in 1996, May Flowers in 1997 and  American Legion Show in 1999. 

She would also co-produce the gallery's public-access TV show with Brown, a further conduit of of connection between the street, outsider and folk art scenes and fine arts in the city.


Mapping the Ineffable in Multi-Dimensions.



Spelunker, Carla Knopp, 1999


It is perhaps fitting that Carla Knopp would show at Utrillo during the gallery's run in the mid-to-late 1990s.  

Folk art collector Robert Dawson's description of 'memory painting' might well apply to the surreal landscapes produced by Knopp during this time. But Knopp's paintings, although perhaps personal in part, seemed tapped into a broad and ancient memory bank –  or maybe timeless is the better word. A boundless collective store of information –  pre-conscious, post-conscious, unconscious, – consisting of an archetypal alien vocabulary of dreamy mysterious hieroglyphs. 

During this period, she captures views of un-graspable vistas, not nightmares or unnerving, but strange, pleasant harmonies of color and characters captured from yelping spurs of thought, memory or imagination.

Corporeality, 1999, paints a picture (top of page), labeled with that word, of  an all-seeing vine that tangles a grid between a bizarre rounded rise of snow, and a warm-colored sky. A prone snowman of sorts is rolling down a slope toward the viewer. Eerie eyeballs of gray, yellow and orange form a stack of spheres in the 'sky' echoed by the three spheres of the puffy 'snowman' below. It is an inexplicable scene, but of such pleasing colors and soft, rounded forms – two worlds, one painted cold and one colored warm –  divided by the bristling vines that guard the wonder of the winter scene from the sunset eyes in the sky.

Spelunker, 1999,  (above) alludes to cave exploration, and is an image that could be equally at home on a Robert Heinlein paperback or a shoegaze CD; the muted range of color and the hazy atmosphere, the segmented mechanics of the insectoid reptile to the left and the graceful and organic symmetry of the blinded weedflower to the right. 

There is a slight orientation of the interior landscape by a central columnar rocky form, but the scene seems to shift in the distance from a peaceful pastoral in shades of purple to a skull-like menace with an orange orb of an eye, and even into a presiding figure with outstretched arms, if you stare long enough. 

Both Corporeality and Spelunker contain the interplay of otherworldly biomorphic vegetation with serene circular forms seen in Knopp's earlier painting, Land of Poetry and Harmless Snakes

In two additional pictures from the period, we see the glimmering golden green of Arcadian landscapes, populated not by people, but by peculiarities. 



Tippi's Water Garden, Carla Knopp, 1999


Tippi's Water Garden, 1999, presents of a small dog, knee-deep in water, at the edge of a pond. A tennis ball floats nearby but the pooch seems to be looking past it. In the waters beyond, perhaps the dog is seeing things. Various animal forms – a bird, a bug, a teddy bear. Teeming things among the moss-covered rocks.

Another greenish gold picture, marvelously funny and charming, is Victorian Gray, 1999. The painting shows a steam-punk flying saucer, decorated with fussy brocade, hovering lopsided above a hilly pasture, seen between two trees. 

The 'gray' is a classic alien of the 'man from Mars' type. The being is enclosed in a soap bubble sphere atop the fancy-dress spacecraft –  or great grandma's lampshade –  whatever the case may be.   

Carla Knopp will exhibit less frequently in Indianapolis over the following few years. However, by about 2007, she will appear again with exhibits at several different venues with her ever evolving  artworks in the ever evolving art scene, as we shall see in Part 5.



Victorian Gray, Carla Knopp, 1999



Mark Diekhoff, May 2026


See also:

Greg Brown - Utrillo Gallery photos at flickr

Harry Blomme exhibition at Utrillo Gallery article by Mary Lee Pappas, NUVO.net

The material used in this article is being used under the fair use provisions of copyright law. The content is being used for educational purposes only, and all rights to the original content are held by their respective copyright owners. We do not claim ownership of any copyrighted material used in this work.


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