Clarissa Knighten
Clarissa Knighten is a designer in Kansas City, MO specializing in wearable art. Her designs and jewelry include both commercial and bold expressive pieces for fashion show runway and gallery exhibitions. She calls her work "sculptural art" finding her direction in natural elements such as shells, bone, and driftwood in combination with stones and manmade elements like buttons, bike chain, and leather. The foundational inspiration for her work is a combination of nature and American roots. The repurposing of objects and the use of bold textures with crocheted wires and natural items create a stunning effect.[1]
As a model, you might recognize Knighten from commercials and print ads: M.U. Academic Medicines; M.U. Health billboards in Columbia, MO; The New Midwest: Forward Momentum commercial in Kansas City, MO; Hallmark’s Valentine 2020 advertisements; Black & Veatch Career path video; and Columbia College brochures. Knighten is a proud, beautiful, recognizable face in K.C. fashion, jewelry arts, mental health advocacy, and design.
Background
Clarissa Knighten's family traveled all over the country when she was young because her father was a Chief Master Sergeant in the Air Force, as reported in the Kansas City Star.[2] Knighten left Corporate America in 2017 after nearly twenty years in marketing to become the CEO of Rissa’s Artistic Design, and a commercial model. Knighten started working full time as a professional artist participating in her first Kansas City fashion week in 2018. She is a member of the African American Artists Collective KC.[3] She founded Rissa’s Artistic Design in 2007 as a way to navigate mental health. Part of Knighten’s purpose behind R.A.D. is to help people understand that they can use life’s challenges to do something positive and impactful.[4] In an interview with Michael Mackie she explains, "Her wares run the gamut from 'earthy to edgy to elegant...Take one look and you’ll spy her jewelry has a voice and an expressive story of resilience. 'I would like to help people understand jewelry is art and in every form heals,' Knighten says."[5] In 2019, Knighten was the closing collection in the West 18th Street Fashion Show, and was one of four designers invited to return to the 20th Anniversary Show, which was captured in the documentary film Summer in Hindsight – Directors Cut.[6]
Recognition & Speaking Engagements
- First Place, Jewelry, Mid-Winter Artist Fair Kansas City, MO Feb 2018, 2020
- Designer with Kansas City Fashion Week, Kansas City, MO 2018-2020[7]
- Fashion Week Featured Artist, Omaha, NE 2020.[8]
- Charlotte Street Residency with the African American Artists Collective, KC MO 2018[9]
References
- "Five Things You Don't Know About Me: Jewelry Artist Clarissa Knighten". In Kansas City. 2019-09-06. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- Van Dieren, Katie Mabry. "Rissa's Artistic Design turns everyday objects into one-of-a-kind accessories". Kansas City Star. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
- Kniggendorf, Anne. "Kansas City Fashion Week Designers Know Not Everyone Can Go Large". www.kcur.org. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- Hughes, Rob (2019-09-17), 'Trust your faith" Designer living dream, inspiring others, retrieved 2020-12-05
- "Five Things You Don't Know About Me: Jewelry Artist Clarissa Knighten". In Kansas City. 2019-09-06. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
- "Fashion on Film | Summer in Hindsight - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
- "FW 2019 RISSA'S ARTISTIC DESIGN". Kansas City Fashion Week. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- "Designer Profile: Clarissa Knighten". Omaha Fashion Week. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
- "African American Artists Collective reside in Capsule for December 2018". Charlotte Street Foundation. 2018-11-20. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- "IUAH ArtWorks Artist Profile: Clarissa Knighten - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
- "GuildIT Presents: Artist Clarissa Knighten - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2020-12-05.