If you are in Seattle do not miss Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight!
Sur face
(a show of video works by Margot Quan Knight)
911
Opening Thursday April 16, 6-9pm - Artist Talk @ 7pm
You can revisit our conversation with Margot by clicking here.
If you are in Seattle do not miss Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight!
Sur face
(a show of video works by Margot Quan Knight)
911
Opening Thursday April 16, 6-9pm - Artist Talk @ 7pm
You can revisit our conversation with Margot by clicking here.

© Margot Quan Knight
Head over to www.margotknight.com to see Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight's new website.
You can also catch Margot in person November 13, 2008 at Prichard Art Gallery in Moscow, Idaho. That day Margot will be giving an artist talk.
Margot's show opens at Prichard Art Gallery the following night, and the opening reception will be held from 5-8 p.m.
In Portland, Margot's short film Portrait of a Woman 1947-2007 is participating in the Northwest Film & Video Festival. It is part of a group of short films (look for "Shorts II") screening on Sat Nov 15 at 6pm. Tickets are at: http://www.nwfilm.org/archives/NWf&V/35nwfest/schedule.php#97
And please do revisit our July conversation with Margot, you can find it in the featured artist section of the Nymphoto website: www.nymphoto.com
Head over to I Heart Photograph to see some of Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight's work.
We heart Margot too! © Margot Quan Knight

Currently on view at Bard © Margot Quan Knight
Nymphoto is proud to present Margot Quan Knight as our current featured artist. Head over to www.nymphoto.com to see and read about Margot's work.
Or go up to Bard College to see her MFA exhibit -- on view through July 27, 2008.
Screenshot © Margot Quan Knight
See Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight's work at:
The 2008 Bard MFA Thesis Exhibition
Sunday, July 20
2 - 5pm
UBS Gallery
7401 South Broadway
Red Hook, NY 12571
More info : www.bard.edu/mfa/
© Margot Quan Knight
Randall Scott Gallery always shows great work and a lot of women artists. Currently on view is the work of Sarah Wilmer and from July 12th -26th, 2008 Randall Scott Gallery (which also recently exhibited the work of Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight) will show the work of Tema Stauffer and Kyoko Hamada. Followed by the work of Jessica Dimmock and a little later the work of Alison Brady.Find out more here.
White Horse © Tema Staufer
Discover more of the work of Nymphoto's very own Margot Quan Knight via Aperture.
And check out her recent podcast interview for The Stranger - if you haven't done so yet.
Margot Quan Knight interviewed by Jen Graves for The Stranger:
podcasts.thestranger.com/2008/04/invisible_margot_quan_knight
Four years ago Nymphoto's second show titled "Filtered" opened on Smith Street.

Filtered © Nymphoto

Intervals © Margot Quan Knight
Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight's solo show "Intervals" opens December 15h at Randal Scott Gallery in Washington, DC. Please join & meet the artist at the opening reception from 6-8 pm.
Opening Reception: December 15th, 2007 6-8 pm
Dates: December 15th, 2007 - January 19th, 2008
Location: 1326 14th Street NW Washington,DC
www.randalscottgallery.com

Intervals © Margot Quan Knight
Nymphoto's Margot Quan Knight's solo show "Intervals" opens December 15h at Randal Scott Gallery in Washington, DC. Please join & meet the artist at the opening reception from 6-8 pm.
Opening Reception: December 15th, 2007 6-8 pm
Dates: December 15th, 2007 - January 19th, 2008
Location: 1326 14th Street NW Washington,DC
www.randalscottgallery.com
Gallery Statement:
How do we experience the passage of time?
While physics may accurately describe a universal space-time, our human experiences seem to defy uniform time on a daily basis: each of us has lived a moment that seemed to last forever, or hours that passed by in a heartbeat.
Margot Quan Knights large scale photographs turn to the physical body, that portal through which all experience arrives. She proposes that the body responds to dense experience by expanding mental focus on the activity at hand, to the exclusion of all other thoughts.
In creating the Intervals series Knight looked to Caravaggio, especially his painting Death
of the Virgin, and more current works by Bill Viola, Karolina Sobecka, and Sam Taylor Wood as inspiration. She also drew on the personal experiences of losing herself in thought,
in a household task, in the chaos of her wedding, and in the interminably long,
clear moment of a car accident.
The Intervals series was sponsored in part by a 2006 CityArtist Grant from the Seattle Mayor's Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs and a 2006 Special Projects Grant from 4Culture.