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January 6, 2012

Charles R. Knight’s Prehistoric Visions

Richard Milner's 'Charles R. Knight: The Artist Who Saw Through Time.'

There has never been a more influential paleoartist than Charles R. Knight. He wasn’t the first to illustrate prehistoric life, and he certainly was not the last to do so with great skill, but, for a time, he envisioned dinosaurs and other ancient creatures with such loving detail that he seemed to be sending back snapshots from lost eras only he could visit.

Science writer Richard Milner recounted Knight’s story in his visual and textual mix-tape of the artist’s work, Charles R. Knight: The Artist Who Saw Through Time. The book is not a straight biography. Even though Milner composed a detailed summary of Knight’s life for the book’s introductory section, the bulk of the glossy volume is a showroom of Knight’s art and quotes from his books and articles. A set of closing chapters covers Knight’s legacy, from efforts to restore cracking murals to the artist’s dream of a scientifically accurate dinosaur theme park, but the greater portion of the volume is a portfolio of Knight’s range and skill.

I did not know much about Knight before reading Milner’s biographical section. I imagined that Knight was simply a passionate observer of nature who committed his imagination to canvas and paper. As Milner ably demonstrates, Knight’s cherished body of work is the fruit of multiple struggles, both physical and vocational, from the time of his birth in 1874. Born with severe nearsightedness, a playtime accident when Knight was a young boy virtually robbed him of sight in his right eye. His vision continued to deteriorate during his entire life. Knight was legally blind by the end of his career, and he had to hold his face only inches from the canvas to see what he was painting.

Knight was also a finicky and often cantankerous artist who had a difficult relationship with his primary sponsor, the American Museum of Natural History. Although Knight’s initial love was illustrating living animals—he designed a bison for a 30 cent stamp and created sculptured visages of animals for the Bronx Zoo that can still be seen on some of the old buildings—in 1894 he was asked to restore the fossil mammal Entelodon for AMNH scientist Jacob Wortman. Wortman and his colleagues were thrilled with the result. It was a triumph for Knight, who had learned a great deal of anatomy from taxidermists at the museum, and paleontologist Henry Fairfield Osborn desperately wanted Knight to be the museum’s chief restorer of prehistoric creatures.

Neither Knight nor Osborn were easy men to work with. Knight refused to have collaborators and rejected almost all criticism. He wanted to hear only scientific corrections from Osborn, and he frequently argued with Osborn about critiques others made of his paintings. And, despite Osborn’s wishes, Knight repeatedly refused to become a museum employee. He wanted to stay a freelance artist, and this created new problems. Osborn had to raise additional funding for Knight’s work, and to do this he often wanted sketches or samples to convince patrons. Knight, however, would not budge on the work until funding was secured and his terms regarding criticism were agreed upon. Knight needed Osborn because the artist was almost perpetually broke or in debt due to poor money handling, and Osborn needed Knight because there was no finer animal artist anywhere. This was a tense alliance that almost completely broke down when Knight created a series of prehistoric murals for the better-funded Field Museum—a project similar to one Osborn had been planning to execute with Knight for the AMNH dinosaur halls. Still, the two eventually overcome their pride and remained friends, albeit ones frequently frustrated by each other.

Knight also showed off his cantankerous nature in numerous editorials. He hated news and magazine articles that made animals seem overly cute or especially vicious, although Knight probably reserved most of his hatred for modern art. Knight loathed the popularity of artists such as Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso. Knight thought their works were “monstrous and inexplicable creations masquerading in the name of art.” Matisse, according to Knight, couldn’t even accurately draw a bird. Knight believed that the modern art movement was primarily the product of savvy art dealers and advertisers. There was a bit of sour grapes about this. As modern art gained in popularity, Knight had an increasingly difficult time selling his own work. People were just not interested in realistic paintings of animals.

Knight’s successes were hard-won, but, as Milner’s biography illustrates, the artist could not have done anything else. Knight’s undeniable passion was painting prehistory into life. A few snippets in the book provide some insights into Knight’s process. For dinosaurs, at least, Knight would often study the mounted skeletons of the animals and then, on the basis of this framework, create a sculpture. He could then study this three-dimensional representation for the play of shadow across the body under different conditions, and from this model Knight would then begin painting. In the case of his murals, though, Knight designed the art but did not paint the actual, full-size pieces himself as Rudolph Zallinger did with the Age of Reptiles. Instead, Knight created a smaller version of the mural which was then expanded according to a grid system by painters. Knight added only touch-up details to the murals.

Those murals and various other paintings continued to inspire artists and scientists after Knight’s death in 1953. After seeing images of absolutely atrocious, cut-rate dinosaur sculptures at a park in South Dakota, Knight wanted to create his own, scientifically accurate garden of dinosaurs and appropriate, Mesozoic-type flora somewhere in Florida. Knight never attracted the investors necessary to create the park, but the idea was carried on by his friend Louis Paul Jones in the form of Sinclair Dinoland at the 1964 World’s Fair in New York. Likewise, Knight’s cutting comments about prehistoric mammal sculptures at the La Brea asphalt seeps in Los Angeles led the institution to eventually commission new, better sculptures after Knight’s style. Even ripoffs of Knight’s work influenced culture. When Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Lost World initially ran in serial form, illustrations based heavily on Knight’s paintings accompanied the text, and the film version of the story featured a now-defunct horned dinosaur genus, Agathaumas, that was clearly based on a painting Knight created with some tips from an ailing Edward Drinker Cope.

Knight was a brilliant and taciturn artist. He constantly battled his boss, artistic society and his own eyesight to create intricate scenes inspired by old bones. In doing so, he elevated realistic, scientific representations of life through the ages into a lovely artistic hybrid. Even as new discoveries about dinosaurs, prehistoric mammals, and other creatures make some of Knight’s illustrations seem dated, his paintings still carry the reflection of someone who joyfully reveled in the story of life.



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6 Comments »

  1. BJ Nicholls says:

    I believe the correct last name for Knight’s friend who created the Sinclair dinosaur sculptures is Jonas.

    http://www.wildlifeart.org/artists/artistDetails/index.php?aID=233

    I didn’t know that Knight and Jonas had a connection. That relationship makes the recent “revisioning” of the Jonas’ stegosaur at Dinosaur National Monument all the more unfortunate. As I posted at my blog, I maintain that it’s no more appropriate to repaint Louis Paul Jonas’ sculpture than it would be to revise the the murals of Charles R. Knight to reflect contemporary science. Not only does this disrespect the artist, it obscures history. Artistic reconstruction has been and remains essential to paleontology. It’s no more appropriate for us to revise a reconstruction than it would be to revise and update historic science papers.

  2. Zhen says:

    It’s sad that we no longer see any of his art in the dinosaur section of the AMNH save for the Allosaurus. All of Knight’s dinosaur paints are gone, but the mammals are still there. Some of them anyway.

  3. Dan Chure says:

    Concerning the change in color patterns on the Stegosaurus at Dinosaur National Monument, as I discussed on my blog, the appropriateness of that depends on what you see as the model’s function. We want visitors to think about dinosaurs as living animals. Color can be related to much of behavior in vertebrates, such as concealment, sexual signaling, juvenile vs adult stages, etc. Since the Stegosaurus is the model we have it is the one we used. We do not want to present the model as an example of past thinking about dinosaurs or as some kind of historical curiosity because we do not see ourselves as that kind of historical museum. One could certainly do that and repaint the model to look as it did in 1963. That’s just not what we see our mission to be. It was not donated to Dinosaur with any stiplulations about not changing the color. The model has undergone numerous repaintings since it arrived here, this is just the latest one.

  4. For Zhen: Last time I visited the American Museum of Natural History (not long ago) I seem to recall that many of the dinosaur paintings were still in place, including the brontosaur/apatosaur, trachodons, dimetrodon (the sail-back mammal-like reptile), and others.

    They are all small paintings, and you have to search them out in the halls. Contrary to popular belief, Knight never did any dinosaur murals for the AMNH. Those are all in the Field Museum in Chicago.

    The AMNH also exhibits (in various places around the Museum) the restored murals of the wooly mammoths and reindeer tromping through the snow, the giant moose Cervalces and beaver in Pleistocene New Jersey, the Neanderthal family, and the Ice Age cave artists as Font-de-Gaume. Early horses in Texas and titanothere murals are also still in place.

    And thanks, Brian, for the wonderful reviews.

  5. Zhen says:

    @ Richard Milner: What, really? I was there last month and I was pretty sure most of them weren’t there. Maybe I wasn’t looking hard enough. I know the Allosaurus painting was placed right along side of the skeleton in clear view. I’ll have to double check. I actually have video footage of my trip. Not that it matters if I’m not looking at the right place.

  6. nice book. what is the price.

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