Colleen Randall

Last updated
Colleen Randall
Born1952
Education Queens College, University of Iowa, Macalester College
Known forPainting, works on paper
Spouse Jeff Friedman
Colleen Randall, Splendid Matter, oil on canvas, 72" x 65", 2018. Colleen Randall Splendid Matter.jpg
Colleen Randall, Splendid Matter, oil on canvas, 72" x 65", 2018.

Colleen Randall (born 1952) is an American abstract painter and art educator. [1] [2] Her work is rooted in the abstract expressionist and sublime traditions and the relationship between nature and human consciousness. [3] [4] [5] Art historian Sarah G. Powers has written, "Like seasonal and climatic shifts, Randall's work responds to nature and weather patterns through materiality and form. As meditations on the impact of sublime natural forces, her paintings transport us from the material fact of painted marks on a surface to a rich and rewarding imaginative experience." [6] Randall has exhibited at the National Academy of Design and The Painting Center in New York, [7] [8] the Hood Museum of Art, [9] and Delaware Art Museum, among other venues. [10] She lives and works in West Lebanon, New Hampshire with her husband, poet and professor Jeff Friedman, and teaches at Dartmouth College. [9] [11]

Contents

Education and career

Randall was born in 1952 in Sauk Centre, Minnesota and was raised in suburban Minneapolis, the eldest of six children of two teachers. [9] During childhood, the rugged natural beauty and dramatic seasonal changes of the nearby St. Croix River Valley made a strong impact on her that has remained an influence on her art. [1] [6] After receiving a BA in art history from Macalester College in 1975, she moved with Friedman to study painting at the University of Iowa, where she earned a BFA (1980) and was influenced by the work of abstract expressionists Jackson Pollock, Willem and Elaine de Kooning and Franz Kline. [9] [6]

In the early 1980s, they moved to New York City, where Randall studied a wide range of approaches at Queens College (MFA, 1983) under the painters Rosemarie Beck, Louis Finkelstein, Clinton Hill and Harry Kramer. [6] [2] [12] After graduating, Randall began exhibiting professionally, appearing in group shows at the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art, Springfield Art Museum, and Vermont Studio Center, and featured exhibitions at Kenkeleba Gallery (1987) and the Hood Museum of Art (1989), among others. [13] [6] That same year, she started teaching at Dartmouth College, where she served as an art professor for over thirty years and as chair of studio art at various points. [14] [15] [9]

In her later career, Randall has had solo exhibitions at The Painting Center (New York), [8] [16] Spheris Gallery (New York and New Hampshire), [17] Elliot Smith Contemporary Art (St. Louis), Dartmouth, [18] and the Hood Museum of Art, among other venues. [19] [9] [6]

Work and reception

Colleen Randall, Mercurial, oil on canvas, 82" x 75", 1999. Colleen Randall Mercurial.jpg
Colleen Randall, Mercurial, oil on canvas, 82" x 75", 1999.

Critics have described Randall's work as deeply Romantic and connected it to the sublime tradition of abstract artists such as Mark Rothko, Clyfford Still and Helen Frankenthaler, and earlier landscape painters like J. M. W. Turner and Frederic Church. [4] [3] [5] [2] Her approach combines abstract expressionist color-field and gestural techniques within a meticulous, additive process that mimics the sedimentary layering of material in nature. [4] [3] [6] She lets each day's work dry, allowing the layers to build in a language of rhythm and repetition that has been described as "an archiving of temporality" in paint. [20] The resulting, highly textured surfaces vary from thick impastos to sculptural brushstrokes to thin veils of color. [4] [3] [6] In an Artcritical review, Nicholas Lamia wrote that in spite of the dramatic weight and volume of paint, her "massive pigment load and heavy textures often become atmospheric" and impart "a feeling of spirituality despite their connections to earthly, geological activity." [3]

Early work

Randall's early work explored connections between memories of landscape and abstraction. [1] [21] It was characterized by her use of dark, luminous colors (redolent of the materials of pigment), large tonal masses, and textures often enhanced by mixing sawdust and marble dust into the oil paint. [15] [22] [21] In a 1992 Philadelphia Inquirer review, Victoria Donohoe wrote, "Randall's paintings are besotted with light [and] the vicissitudes of stroke and counterstroke," with surfaces that mixed buoyant transparency and buttery density, gestural drips, and thick lunges of paint recalling the work of Hans Hofmann. [1] According to Art New England, the work in Randall's "The Freedom to Create" exhibition (New Hampshire Institute of Art, 1996) gained emotional strength through its dialogue of opposites: warm versus cool; dark versus light; smooth versus rough; swirling gesture against subtly modulated fields; and complementary hues. [4] [23]

Later work

At Dartmouth College in 2001, Randall presented paintings employing a limited palette described in a review as "musty khaki, creamed coffee and tree bark," with hints beneath of prussian blue, earthy greens, coppery blues, and greens. [18] [19] [17] Robert Garlitz wrote that the rich mix of thick paint, layers of glazing, splatters, drips, and interwoven filaments suggested the tangle of bare woods in November, as well as moss, rock outcroppings, and granite; of the exhibition, he observed that the work initially appeared flat, but in concert, "created an interior light, screens or 'chambers' of dusky meditative light within the 'white cube' of the gallery … transforming the space into a chapel or meditative space (sacred)." [18] In a 2005 review of Randall's Painting Center show, Artcritical likened a similar play of textures and color eruptions to "liquid tectonic quilts" with new layers threatening to bubble forth. [3]

Colleen Randall, Inflorescence#32, oil on canvas, 44" x 58", 2007. Colleen Randall Inflorescence 32.jpg
Colleen Randall, Inflorescence#32, oil on canvas, 44" x 58", 2007.

Her later work has been described as more ethereal and focused on expressing states of being and the interplay of light through paint. [20] [24] [25] Works exhibited at Dartmouth ("Livia’s Walls", 2009) and The Painting Center (2012) were inspired by garden paintings from the ancient Roman Villa of Livia, which she studied during a Whiting Foundation travel fellowship. [26] [16] Her "Intimations" and "Immanence" series (2012–6) investigated space and light, particularly a sense of inner, radiant light. [16] [12] [27] Boston Globe critic Cate McQuaid described Immanence 4 as "a rocky impasto, earthbound save for its crepuscular colors, tangerine and periwinkle … [its] paint growing thready, dissolving like spun cotton candy. [5]

Randall's 2020 exhibition, "In the Midst of Something Splendid" (Hood Museum of Art), included "Immanence" works, paintings inspired by the abundance and fertility of Colorado landscapes, and the black-and-white, acrylic "Syncope" series; the latter was named after a Catherine Clément philosophical book, which related states of rapture caused by temporary loss of consciousness (e.g., fainting) to similar effects caused by the arts. [6] [2] Reviews described the show's oil paintings as awash in gold, blue, and crimson color fields, with shifting textures, shades, and light that created a mesmerizing sense of motion, ranging from meditative to roiling. [11] [9]

Recognition

Randall has received awards from the National Academy of Design, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and Marion and Jasper Whiting Foundation. [15] [12] [6] She has been awarded artist residencies by Yaddo, MacDowell, Millay Colony for the Arts, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and Landfall Trust (Newfoundland), among others. [28] [29] [15] [12]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cecily Brown</span> British painter

Cecily Brown is a British painter. Her style displays the influence of a variety of contemporary painters, from Willem de Kooning, Francis Bacon and Joan Mitchell, to Old Masters like Rubens, Poussin and Goya. Brown lives and works in New York.

Friedel Dzubas was a German-born American abstract painter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frank Lobdell</span> American painter

Frank Lobdell (1921–2013) was an American painter, often associated with the Bay Area Figurative Movement and Bay Area Abstract Expressionism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eric Aho</span> American painter

Eric Aho is an American painter living in Vermont. DC Moore Gallery in New York City represents his work.

Rosemarie Beck was an American abstract expressionist, figurative expressionist painter in the post-World War II era. She was married to the writer and editor Robert Phelps.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Valerie Hegarty</span> American artist (born 1967)

Valerie Hegarty is an American painter, sculptor, and installation artist. She is known for irreverent, often critical works that replicate canonical paintings, furnishings, and architectural spaces from American or personal history undergoing various processes of transformation. Hegarty most often portrays her recreations in meticulously realized, trompe l’oeil states of decay, ruin, or physical attack related to their circumstances. Her work examines American historical themes involving colonization, slavery, Manifest Destiny, nationalism, art-historical movements and their ideological tenets, romantic conceptions of nature, and environmental degradation. Sculpture critic Robin Reisenfeld wrote that among other things, Hegarty's art is "informed by 19th-century American landscape painting as an expression of the sublime, as well as by the manufacturing of two-dimensional 'masterworks' to be destroyed in three-dimensional fashion in order to evoke entropic forces of growth and decay."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lisa Corinne Davis</span> American painter

Lisa Corinne Davis is an American visual artist known for abstract paintings and works on paper that suggest maps and other encoded forms of knowledge. She employs abstraction as a means of rendering the complexities of contemporary experience—including her own as an African-American woman—often questioning preconceived notions about identity, classification, and rationality versus subjectivity. Her densely layered, colorful work merges contrasting schemas, visual elements and formal languages, blurring distinctions between figuration and abstraction, real and fictive spaces and concepts, and microcosmic or macrocosmic reference. Brooklyn Rail critic Joan Waltemath wrote, "The urban experiences of space and time that Davis presents are subtle distillations of moment and coincidence ... Her attempt to map the shattered terrain of contemporary life points both to an awareness of other times and a belief in navigating the present one."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mernet Larsen</span> American artist (born 1940)

Mernet Larsen is an American artist known for idiosyncratic, disorienting narrative paintings that depict a highly abstracted, parallel world of enigmatic and mundane scenarios. Since 2000, her work has been characterized by flat, origami-like figures composed of plank-like shapes and blocky volumes and non-illusionistic space with a dislocated, aggregated vision freely combining incompatible pictorial systems—reverse, isometric, parallel, and conventional Renaissance perspectives—and various visual distortions. Critics have described her approach as "a heady, unlikely brew" taking compositional cues from wide-ranging sources, including the modernist geometries of Constructivist artists like El Lissitzky, Japanese Bunraku puppet theater and emaki narrative scrolls, early Chinese landscapes, and Indian miniatures and palace paintings. Roberta Smith wrote that Larsen's works "navigate the divide between abstraction and representation with a form of geometric figuration that owes less to Cubo-Futurism than to de Chirico, architectural rendering and early Renaissance painting of the Sienese kind. They relish human connection and odd, stretched out, sometimes contradictory perspectival effects, often perpetuated by radical shifts in scale."

Paul Pagk is an abstract painter born in England, UK in 1962. He moved to France in 1973. He lives and works in New York City since 1988.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sigrid Burton</span> American painter

Sigrid Burton is an American visual artist, known for semi-abstract paintings that combine atmospheric color fields and allusions to nature and culture. Her work bears a wide range of influences, including Buddhist cave and Indian miniature paintings, Jain cosmological diagrams, and artists from the Renaissance to modernists such as Kandinsky, Klee and the Color field painters to the California Light and Space movement. Critics have noted the predominance of color over form in her work, sometimes describing her approach as "chromatic expressionism."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helen O'Toole</span> American painter and educator

Helen O'Toole is an Irish-born painter based in the United States, who is known for abstract paintings suggestive of landscape. She has exhibited throughout Ireland and the United States, in Singapore, and at venues including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Portland Art Museum, Chicago Cultural Center, Tacoma Art Museum, and Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore. Her work has been featured in the journals Artforum, Arts Magazine, New Art Examiner, and Zyzzyva, as well as the Chicago Tribune,The Irish Times, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, and National Public Radio. Art writers frequently discuss the interplay in her work between abstraction, the evocation of otherworldly light, land and space, and a commitment to investigating meaning through a painting process akin to the processes of cultivation and excavation. Artforum critic James Yood wrote, "echoing the often inchoate quality of nature, her paint surges toward mystery and hints at a kind of chiaroscuro of the spirit"; curator Bonnie Laing-Malcomson suggests her "richly colored monumental paintings evoke the moody landscape of her rural Irish homeland, summoning the force of J. M. W. Turner and Mark Rothko." She has been recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship in Fine Arts, a Contemporary Northwest Art Award, and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Award (2013), among other awards. O'Toole lives in Seattle, Washington and is Professor of Art and Chair of the Painting and Drawing Program at the University of Washington.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Judith Murray (artist)</span> American artist

Judith Murray is an American abstract painter based in New York City. Active since the 1970s, she has produced a wide-ranging, independent body of work while strictly adhering to idiosyncratic, self-imposed constants within her practice. Since 1975, she has limited herself to a primary palette of red, yellow, black and white paints—from which she mixes an infinite range of hues—and a near-square, horizontal format offset by a vertical bar painted along the right edge of the canvas; the bar serves as a visual foil for the rest of the work and acknowledges each painting’s boundary and status as an abstract object. Critic Lilly Wei describes Murray's work as "an extended soliloquy on how sensation, sensibility, and digressions can still be conveyed through paint" and how by embracing the factual world the "abstract artist can construct a supreme and sustaining fiction."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joanna Pousette-Dart</span> American visual artist (born 1947)

Joanna Pousette-Dart is an American abstract artist, based in New York City. She is best known for her distinctive shaped-canvas paintings, which typically consist of two or three stacked, curved-edge planes whose arrangements—from slightly precarious to nested—convey a sense of momentary balance with the potential to rock, tilt or slip. She overlays the planes with meandering, variable arabesque lines that delineate interior shapes and contours, often echoing the curves of the supports. Her work draws on diverse inspirations, including the landscapes of the American Southwest, Islamic, Mozarabic and Catalan art, Chinese landscape painting and calligraphy, and Mayan art, as well as early and mid-20th-century modernism. Critic John Yau writes that her shaped canvasses explore "the meeting place between abstraction and landscape, quietly expanding on the work of predecessors", through a combination of personal geometry and linear structure that creates "a sense of constant and latent movement."

Kay Lindjuwanga is an Aboriginal Australian artist from Maningrida in the Northern Territory of Australia. She is known for her bark paintings which often make use of Aboriginal rrark designs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Regina Pilawuk Wilson</span> Australian Aboriginal artist

Regina Pilawuk Wilson is an Australian Aboriginal artist known for her paintings, printmaking and woven fiber-artworks. She paints syaws, warrgarri, and message sticks. Her work has been shown in many Australian and international museums, collections and galleries. She has won the General Painting category of the Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Awards in 2003 for a syaw painting. Wilson has been a finalist for the Kate Challis RAKA Award, the Togart Award, and the Wynne Prize.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Judith Simonian</span> American painter

Judith Simonian is an American artist known for her montage-like paintings and early urban public art. She began her career as a significant participant in an emergent 1980s downtown Los Angeles art scene that spawned street art and performances, galleries and institutions such as Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE) and Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art (LAICA), before moving to New York City in 1985.

Frances Barth is an American visual artist best known for paintings situated between abstraction, landscape and mapping, and in her later career, video and narrative works. She emerged during a period in which contemporary painters sought a way forward beyond 1960s minimalism and conceptualism, producing work that combined modernist formalism, geometric abstraction, referential elements and metaphor. Critic Karen Wilkin wrote, "Barth’s paintings play a variety of spatial languages against each other, from aerial views that suggest mapping, to suggestions of perspectival space, to relentless flatness … [she] questions the very pictorial conventions she deploys, creating ambiguous imagery and equally ambiguous space that seems to shift as we look."

Jill Nathanson is an American visual artist and educator. She is associated with color field painting. Nathanson lives in New York City

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Bordo</span> Canadian-American painter

Robert Bordo is a New York-based, Canadian-American artist known for paintings that blend modernist formal concerns with postmodern approaches to image, subject matter and metaphor. Throughout his career, he has worked in painting series positioned between representation and abstraction that critics characterize as conceptually structured, yet sensual in execution. These series explore recurring, often overlapping themes, such as memory and experience, the passage of time, landscape and weather phenomena, mapping, and mark-making as an indicator of thought. New York Times critic Roberta Smith described Bordo's early map paintings as charting an idiosyncratic "hybrid discipline … a kind of cartographically conscious rerouting of modernism"; in a 2019 New Yorker review of his "crackup" paintings, Andrea Scott wrote, "Bordo's imagery is an apt metaphor for our current, contentious political climate, but his true subject is painting itself: how easily it can tip realism into abstraction or shift figure-ground relations until it's impossible to discern whether you’re on the inside looking out or vice versa."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lorraine Shemesh</span> American painter

Lorraine Shemesh is an American artist whose practice focuses on painting, drawing, and ceramics. Since the early 1990s, she has created investigations of the human form that balance contemporary realism with an abstract expressionist concern for gesture, rhythm and pattern. Her best-known series depict active swimmers in pools viewed from above and underwater or intertwined, costumed dancers set in ambiguous, compressed spaces. In the 2000s, her work has increasingly moved towards abstraction, with figures dissolving into faithfully rendered optical phenomena or geometric patterning. Describing these qualities, Art in America critic Jonathan Goodman wrote, "being true to nature enables Shemesh to record a dazzling array of painterly gestures, some of them squarely within the tradition of Abstract Expressionism … Her use of abstract effects in the service of representation is striking and makes her art complex."

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Donohoe, Victoria. "Young Abstract Painter at Swarthmore," The Philadelphia Inquirer, September 13, 1992, p. 22-M.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Kane, Debbie. "Colleen Randall," Art New England, January/February, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Lamia, Nicholas. "Colleen Randall at The Painting Center," Artcritical, March 2005. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Craven, Robert. "Colleen Randall: The Freedom to Create," Art New England, February/March 1997, p.45.
  5. 1 2 3 McQuaid, Cate. "Spinning paint into gold in a show at HallSpace," The Boston Globe, December 30, 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Powers, Sarah G. "Colleen Randall: In the Midst of Something Splendid," In the Midst of Something Splendid: Recent Paintings by Colleen Randall, Katherine W. Hart (ed.), Hanover, NH: Hood Museum of Art, 2020.
  7. Rosenberg, Karen. "Where Have All the Paintings Gone? To the National Academy," The New York Times, May 30, 2008. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  8. 1 2 Abstract Art Online. "Colleen Randall at The Painting Center," March 15, 2005. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Smith, Nicola. "Painter Colleen Randall connects with the energy of abstraction," Valley News, January 29, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  10. Art Daily. "Delaware Art Museum hosts community exhibition of five local painters," News. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  11. 1 2 Silverstein, Hannah. "Faculty Exhibition Puts Viewer 'In the Midst of Something Splendid,'" Dartmouth News, February 4, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  12. 1 2 3 4 The Painting Center. Colleen Randall: Recent Paintings," 2015. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  13. Sims, Patterson. Missouri Painting, The Missouri Arts Council, 1984.
  14. Dartmouth College. Colleen Randall, Faculty. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  15. 1 2 3 4 Smith, Nicola. "Randall's Paintings Moody and Luminous", Valley News, January 11, 1996.
  16. 1 2 3 The Painting Center. Colleen Randall: Intimations," 2012. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  17. 1 2 Craven, Robert. "The Abstract Mind: Painters of the Spheris Gallery," Art New England, August/September 2002.
  18. 1 2 3 Garlitz, Robert. "Ink Has Won! Long Live Paint!" Tangents, November 2001. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  19. 1 2 Forge, Andrew. Colleen Randall, New Paintings: 1999-2001, Hanover, NH: Hood Museum of Art, 2001.
  20. 1 2 Bland, Celia. "Seeing the American Sublime," In the Midst of Something Splendid: Recent Paintings by Colleen Randall, Katherine W. Hart (ed.), Hanover, NH: Hood Museum of Art, 2020.
  21. 1 2 Magiera, Frank. "Creative Visitations," Worcester Telegram and Gazette, February 3, 1992.
  22. Davenport, Charlotte. "'Artists and Poets' Exhibit Enchanting, Wide-Reaching," The Vermont Standard, October 23, 1997.
  23. Svedlow, Andrew Jay. Colleen Randall: The Freedom To Create, Manchester, NH: Manchester Institute of Arts and Sciences, 1996.
  24. McQuaid, Cate. "Painting is Not a Good Idea," The Boston Globe, December 16, 2016.
  25. Anumolu, Mouisha. "New Hood Museum exhibit excites imaginations of viewers," The Dartmouth, February 4, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  26. Root, Nicholas. "Exhibition showcases prof's art," The Dartmouth, April 20, 2009. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  27. Artscope. "Painting is Not a Good Idea at HallSpace," December 15, 2016.
  28. Yaddo. Visual Artists Archived 2021-06-14 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  29. O'Donnell, Susannah Cassady. "American Colonial: Culture Touring New Hampshire's Merrimack Valley on the 100th Anniversary of the MacDowell Colony," Museum News, September/October 1996, p. 56.