In December 2025, physicists at Hiroshima University proposed that the first fractions of a second after the Big Bang produced two species of cosmic string — magnetic flux tubes and superfluid vortices — that wound around one another and locked into stable topological knots. These structures briefly dominated the energy budget of the newborn universe before decaying into the matter-antimatter asymmetry from which all baryonic matter emerged. Before atoms, before forces, before form: topology. The knot comes first; identity is secondary. Cosmic Knots takes this as its premise and extends it as an institutional argument. Art that cannot be reduced to the image, quantified in metrics, or circulated as commodity data operates structurally like the cosmic knot. It precedes its own documentation. It exits the circuits of commodification by refusing to be photographed, counted, or made shareable.