Skip to content
JULIJE KNIFER Composition 15  1959

JULIJE KNIFER
Composition 15 
1959
Oil on canvas
21 3/4 by 25 1/2 in.  55.3 by 64.7 cm
 

JULIJE KNIFER Untitled 1969

JULIJE KNIFER
Untitled
1969
Acrylic on canvas
24 ¾ by 24 ¾ in.  63 by 63 cm.
Courtesy of the Estate of Julije Knifer and Galerie Frank Elbaz, Paris

JULIJE KNIFER BGS nº3 1973

JULIJE KNIFER
BGS nº3
1973
Acrylic on canvas
31 1/2 by 47 1/2 in.  80 by 120 cm.
 

JULIJE KNIFER Tü E (Tuebingen Ecke) 1973

JULIJE KNIFER
Tü E (Tuebingen Ecke)
1973
Acrylic on canvas in two panels
1. 39 3/8 by 59 in.  100 by 150 cm.
2. 39 1/2 by 48 3/4 in.  100.3 by 123.8 cm

JULIJE KNIFER MK 73-7 1973

JULIJE KNIFER
MK 73-7
1973
Acrylic on canvas
31 1/2 by 39 3/8 in.  80 by 100 cm.

JULIJE KNIFER SP VIII 3 1973

JULIJE KNIFER
SP VIII 3
1973
Acrylic on canvas
35 3/8 by 51 5/8 in.  90 by 131 cm.

JULIJE KNIFER SPVIII 4 1973

JULIJE KNIFER
SPVIII 4
1973
Acrylic on canvas
39 3/8 by 39 3/8 in.  100 by 100 cm.

JULIJE KNIFER H.d Tü tri v. 1975 I. 1975

JULIJE KNIFER
H.d Tü tri v. 1975 I.
1975
Acrylic on canvas
Three panels, each: 67 by 49 1/4 in.  170.2 by 124.1 cm.
 

Press Release

Mitchell-Innes & Nash is pleased to announce its second solo exhibition of works by Croatian artist Julije Knifer (1924 – 2004). Featuring paintings, works on paper and a large-scale mural, this exhibition delves into the conceptual and process-based painting principles of Knifer’s meander—an abstract geometric form that the artist developed in 1959 and which became, through innumerable subtle permutations and various media, the primary, if not sole, visual motif in the artist’s practice.

Born in 1924 in Osijek in what is now the Republic of Croatia, Julije Knifer studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb from 1951 to 1957—a milieu which could be described as a hotbed of aesthetic experimentation. However, the highly intellectualized movements that grew out of this environment, specifically Neo-Constructivism, did not sit comfortably with Knifer and, in 1959, he co-founded the Gorgona Group; that same year, as noted previously, he made his first meander work.

The Gorgona Group (1959 – 1966) was a loose consortium of artists working in various media that subscribed to an “anti-art” agenda. Disillusioned with, or perhaps skeptical of, the lofty ambitions of bourgeois modernism, the Gorgona Group made work that reflected a nihilist counter perspective. Indeed, the intentional and relentless repetition of the meander recalls the concept of eternal recurrence, an idea that was central to the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche and which underscored Knifer’s proto-conceptual questioning of art’s transcendental power.

The severe simplicity of Knifer’s work is, above all, a kind of aesthetic distillation that divorces form from not only its descriptive obligations but also from its long-held role as a vehicle for symbolic and philosophical meaning. In this, Knifer’s work paradoxically invites and rejects interpretation. The meander becomes a language we cannot understand but which, like music, we are capable of intimately feeling.

I wanted to go towards the minimum, towards simplification. After reading Stravinsky’s phrase that music is nothing but rhythm, I thought, why not apply this idea to a flat surface?

—Julije Knifer, 1991

This exhibition is organized in conjunction with galerie frank elbaz, Paris.