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Born in Los Angeles, Gail Greenfield Randall spent
twenty years producing colorful figurative paintings with a modernist
twist. When her grandmother died in 2006 Randall unexpectedly
found a new form of self-expression in assemblage.
I adored my grandmother. She is really
responsible for teaching me to look for beauty in all the things
that surround us. I remember she had a drawer in her bureau that
had dividers and each of the compartments held a little treasure,
like seashells, a pocket watch, bird feathers, a soft leather
tobacco pouch, a piece of my mothers hair tied with a ribbon.
I just loved it. When she passed away, the memory of that drawer
kept bobbing to the surface of my mind and I knew exactly where
my art needed to go. I started making assemblages, incorporating
pieces from collections Ive maintained over the years, found
materials, wonderful treasures given to me from friends
basements and attics, and objects I create myself.
Randalls assemblages are clearly indebted
to Joseph Cornell, the master of the form, however there are distinct
differences between the work of the two artists. Whereas Cornells
boxes explore metaphysical themes and the concept of duality,
Randalls pieces are less abstract and ethereal. There is
a coherent narrative thread that runs through each of her pieces,
and, in that sense, the boxes function as a kind of proscenium
stage where a drama unfolds. Randall telegraphs her narratives
to the viewer through an alphabet of objects thats entirely
her own. Clocks, pool balls, metal stamps, tiny seahorses, keys,
medicine bottles, hand-painted spools -- she tells stories and
many of them involve the palpable tactility of the clusters of
ephemera that fill her assemblages. The smooth fragility of an
egg; the cool of a glass vial filled with water; the undulating
surface of a seashell -- the viewer neednt hold these objects
to know what they feel like. A shared sense-memory is activated
by the sight of them; to look at these objects is to know how
they feel.
Im really a Luddite, and Im
drawn to objects that are not mass-produced -- things that were
made beautifully. By encapsulating a vignette Ive created,
I feel as if I have stopped time. Whatever feelings that piece
evokes -- melancholy, yearning, dread, peace or delight -- have
been preserved. Its not going anywhere. Its a snapshot
of time.
To read about Randalls latest show, click
here
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