Karen Knorr - Cabinet of Curiosities Karen Knorr - Inferno Karen Knorr - King's Audience Karen Knorr - Richmond Hill Karen Knorr - Demartaeus Salon (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - Ledoux's Reception (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - Salon Lilas (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Corridor (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Green Bedroom Louis XVI (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Yellow Room Louis XV (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - Threshold (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Blue Salon Louis XVI - 2 (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Blue Salon Louis XVI - 3 (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Blue Salon Louis XVI - 4 (Musée Carnavalet) Karen Knorr - The Chase Karen Knorr - The King's Bedchamber Karen Knorr - The King's Reception Karen Knorr - The Purple Room (Leda) Karen Knorr - The Rooftop Conference Karen Knorr - The Stag and Wolf Room Karen Knorr - The Stag's Room (Diane) Karen Knorr - The Woodpecker Karen Knorr - The Battle Gallery Karen Knorr - The Forecourt Karen Knorr - The Music Room 1 Karen Knorr - The Music Room 2 Karen Knorr - The Passage Karen Knorr - The Ramp (1) Karen Knorr - The Ramp (2) Karen Knorr - The Rooftop (1) Karen Knorr - The Shelf Karen Knorr - The Stairs Karen Knorr - Kenwood Karen Knorr - The Library I Karen Knorr - The Library II

KAREN KNORR

One of the most imaginative photographers at work today, Karen Knorr's works combine a profound sense of place with concerns that range from the sociological to the allegorical.

Knorr's artfully constructed interiors range from the baroque architecture of the Chateau Carnavalet to the famously austere minimalism of Le Corbusier's Villa Savoye. Unexpectedly, these spaces are occupied not by the foreseen human subjects but by animals, roaming unfettered and free in playful subversion of the palaces of high culture to which they have gained access.

The animals in Knorr's works can be seen to relate allegorically to fables, which were created to relay social mores and often criticise human behaviour. Symbolic also of nature, these animal subjects create the possibility to re-instil the human relationship to nature that has been de-coupled with the evolution of high culture.

In discussing her works from the Villa Savoye, Knorr has said:

"The idea of this house is that it is a free-flowing space that blurs the boundaries between the inside and the outside. I chose birds as the animal type to go into this building because all the work with the animals and these architectural spaces is about blurring the boundaries, disrupting the boundaries, or transgressing the boundaries between nature and culture. These birds [the crane and the magpie] formally echo the architectural space with their colour; they are, in a way, playfully formalist devices. The building is very clean - you can't imagine organic matter. The birds are unnatural in this environment, totally unnatural, like the building itself."

The boundaries of the real and imagined in Knorr's works are further blurred when investigating the layers of time present in her seductive compositions, which take contemporary views of antique interiors, positioning them in a timelessness which is set further adrift by the inclusion of analogue and digital photography in the same image.