Hello,
I'm Mic Knight. Like many creative people, I apply my artistic sensibilities to more than one field. In addition to my work in videography, I'm also an art professional, teaching, creating and exhibiting my aluminum sculptures. My work has been exhibited in museums, sold in fine art galleries and displayed at shows in my hometown area of Tampa Bay, Florida.
In the following pages, you'll see a portfolio of my work, along with notes, sketches and photos showing the progression of some of my ideas such as my tribute to the Twin
Towers, created after the attack on New
York and the Pentagon. It's title is:
Point In Time 010911, 2002

Photo by Bud Lee
This work was displayed at the acclaimed Leepa Rattner Museum, located
in Tarpon Springs, Florida. Hundreds of people viewed this work at the museum, where it was used as the centerpiece of a memorial tribute on 9-11-2002. After the service, I was gratified by the number of people that sought me out and thanked me for creating this sculpture, which stands as a tribute to the spirit of the original building.
I'm indebted to Leepa Rattner
volunteer Sally Salke, who wrote and
distributed the following:
On September 11, 2001, The United
States experienced an unprovoked
terrorist attack on its people and
principles. The wanton destruction and
loss of life was documented by countless
television cameras as the nation watched
it happen. Every television station
replayed it again and again. September
11 generated disbelief, fear, outrage
and anger. In the wake of the chaos, it
also generated creativity.
In frustration and the need to help,
many artists were driven to do something
to memorialize the day. This creativity
is a healing process.
Point In Time 010911 was Mic Knight's
response to September 11th. The
sculpture was finished by October 2001.
It is a tribute to the World Trade
Center, the massive aluminum faced,
steel framed towers that stood 1,368
feet in the air, in Manhattan, gracing
New York City's skyline. The Towers were
completed in early 1973 and were known
as a world financial center and a
marvelous tourist attraction. From the
observation deck, 1,320 feet above the
sidewalk, you could see for 45 miles in
every direction. Each of its 110 floors
had one acre of rentable space. In 1976,
the chief architect, Minoru Yamasaki,
wrote "...the world Trade Center is
a living symbol of man's dedication to
world peace."
Mic Knight is an artist who uses
various commercial materials and turns
them into abstract sculptures. Point In
Time 010911 was not intended to
replicate the World Trade Center
buildings. It was designed to capture
its spirit as well as depict it as
unscarred, undefeated and gleaming in
the light, reflecting clouds and the
surrounding world.
Made of fabricated industrial
aluminum, Mic ground and burnished the
entire surface. Limited by the material,
the mat-like finish reflects a texture
of planned and random designs. Although
he researched the World Trade Center's
actual dimensions, he chose to make his
sculpture taller than scale. (The
sculpture stands 78 inches tall) For
him, by looking up, the sculpture
represents a tribute not only to the
complex but also to our nation's
liberty.
We must never forget that intolerance
is the enemy of the principals upon
which our country was founded. Artists
like Mic Knight have helped us
remember."
Part of a presentation by Sally Salke
of Mic Knight's artwork Point In Time
010911 at the Leepa Rattner
Museum, Tarpon Springs, Florida, on the
first anniversary of the 2001 terrorist
attack on America.
I invite you to browse through more
images and information about my aluminum
metal sculpting. Just click on any of
the links is this menu:
Commisioned
Work
Sculptures
Art
Speak
Links