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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7.1/10

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8.0/10

Industrial Symphony No. 1: The Dream of the Brokenhearted
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6.0/10

Sing
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7.1/10

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6.0/10

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7.4/10

Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl
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6.5/10

Taylor Swift: Reputation Stadium Tour
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6.0/10

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6.6/10

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7.3/10

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7.2/10

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6.6/10

Looking for Richard
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6.8/10

Pitch Perfect 3
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6.5/10

Moonwalker
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6.3/10

Adult World
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6.1/10
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7.5/10