
Walk in Progress
L21 Barcelona, Spain
2023

The “theme and variations” structure is
particularly well known in classical music,
and some compositions that follow this
method have been incredibly successful,
such as Bach’s famous “Goldberg Variations”. It is a formal technique in which the
same material is repeated in different ways.
But this means of approaching the creative
process is also common in art. To put just a
few examples, at the end of the 19th century,
Monet made a series of paintings in La
Vallée de la Creuse where he explored the
effect of natural light on the same landscape. This was his first planned and defined
series. And during the 60s, “artists challenged the traditional reverence for the unique
masterpiece and instead explored the
possibilities of repetition and change. (...)
The works do not present final aesthetic solutions, but rather they express a moment in the infinite multitude of possibilities”. Dutch artist Geran Knol naturally connects with this way of seeing the world and creating. Both as an artist and as a musician, he explores repetition and variation in a conscious and intuitive way. He started his career as an illustrator, but in 2020 he started painting on canvas and from then on there was a paradigm shift. Physical matter gained more and more importance until reaching the present time. In addition to drawing and painting, he now manipulates found fabric to stitch and patchwork it into distorted patterns and collage.
The works do not present final aesthetic solutions, but rather they express a moment in the infinite multitude of possibilities”. Dutch artist Geran Knol naturally connects with this way of seeing the world and creating. Both as an artist and as a musician, he explores repetition and variation in a conscious and intuitive way. He started his career as an illustrator, but in 2020 he started painting on canvas and from then on there was a paradigm shift. Physical matter gained more and more importance until reaching the present time. In addition to drawing and painting, he now manipulates found fabric to stitch and patchwork it into distorted patterns and collage.
The title of this solo exhibition, “Walk in
Progress”, refers precisely to the idea of
series and constant search. Geometri and human figures are recurrent in his work,
but they are evolving. The artworks exhibited here explore lines and grids on which a human figure stands out, always looking
sideways and alone. In fact, from the narrative or even emotional point of view, the
isolated figures, with no defined features
and a certain melancholic air, seem to
explore a chosen or imposed state of
solitude. But Knol also likes his work to
highlight his naïve signature, which softens
what we see. And indeed, there is something poetic about this mix of humor, nostalgia, and innocence.
In addition to reproducing the same figures
numerous times, Knol is interested in
establishing a set of rules or limitations to later connect with the creative freedom
within that structure.
Sometimes the size of the fabric works as a limit, or the rule is to follow a certain geometric pattern. As David Hockney, one of the painters who has influenced him the most, said: “You’ve got to plan to be spontaneous”. In a way, Knol’s work functions with dichotomies: variation and repetition, flatness and depth, limits and spontaneity. Looking at “An Outside Scene and “A Bigger Outside Scene” (whose title are actually inspired by two works by Hockney) one can truly understand the meaning 22 of this search and experience how subtle variations can convey similar yet distinct emotions.
Sometimes the size of the fabric works as a limit, or the rule is to follow a certain geometric pattern. As David Hockney, one of the painters who has influenced him the most, said: “You’ve got to plan to be spontaneous”. In a way, Knol’s work functions with dichotomies: variation and repetition, flatness and depth, limits and spontaneity. Looking at “An Outside Scene and “A Bigger Outside Scene” (whose title are actually inspired by two works by Hockney) one can truly understand the meaning 22 of this search and experience how subtle variations can convey similar yet distinct emotions.
Exhibition text written by Florence Rodenstein


With a Silent Drum
L21 Gallery, Palma
2021
Installation view “With a Silent Drum”.
Met Stille Trom XIII
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021

Met Stille Trom XIV
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021



Installation views “With a Silent Drum”.
Met Stille Trom XVII
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021

Met Stille Trom XVIII
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021

Met Stille Trom XVI
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
100 x 100 cm
2021
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
100 x 100 cm
2021

Met Stille Trom X
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021
Acrylic, pastel and charcoal on canvas
60 x 50 cm
2021