Knud Odde looks back in time
when building his cabinet of images. He searches out pictures
of people and situations which carry with them dreams and
impressions from a recent past, and which have become, often
without our noticing - elements of a contemporary mythology,
moving through dark and secret paths, the pictorial art
of our time, music and other expressions.
An important element within Knud Odde's pictorial world
is his many years as a musician, as songwriter and bass
guitarist in the leading Scandinavian rock group Sort Sol.
The group represented the high points of the punk era, and
has since pursued more conventional and classical types
of rock, which also reflects a historical awareness. Historical
connections are not only gained from rock-history - his
texts may also use themes from modernist art and revolutionary
architecture, such as Vladimir Tatlin's leaning tower, -
the monument for the Third International.
Knud Odde also has a past as a research librarian, specialising
in film history. He here had access to printed and photographed
material from the early days of cinema, a definitive source
for his own production of pictures.
Most of the themes within his pictures appear to be based
on the media pictures of the 1950s and 1960s, of the heroes
and fantasy scenes of the time. Primitive - but at the time
revolutionary printing techniques using colour simplification
and graphical tricks, renounced the realistic element, and
with it the modesty of the psychological portrait.
The American culture of Hollywood, weekly magazines, comic
strips and advertising became both the theme and the motif
for the artists of the Pop Art movement of the 1960's. For
the Andy Warhol generation it was both their own age and
their cultural condition. A territory to be acknowledged
whilst finding its own existential formula.
Knud Odde is not American. He approaches themes as a European,
with both perspective and distance, but also with love.
He stretches the notion of time - incorporating the present
within the form of Merce Cunningham or Patti Smith, but
also the Europeans of the 1920s into his repertoire.
A pictorial language emerges of an observant, ironic distance,
and a unique intimacy, with warm and erotic overtones.
Per Hovdenakk, 1999
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