Upside Down & Inside Out
is an exhibition of new and recent sculpture and works on paper by
Peter Randall-Page which push traditional boundaries of making. Best known for his sculpture
in stone which is in public and private collections around the world, Randall-Page is also a
prolific draughtsman and regularly works with other media including ceramics, print
-making
and casting.
Randall-Page has a long-standing relationship with the foundry Pangolin Editions and this show
includes a series of three new monumental bronze works exploring the relationship between
growth and erosion. Randall-Page carved directly into the sand moulds taken from naturally
eroded granite boulders, working from the inside out. In Randall-Page’s unique process, the
carved indentations in the interior of the moulds become convex bulges. The uniform man-
made tool used to create the indentations contrasts with the natural form of the original
boulders, which is reminiscent of his earlier
Theme and Variation
series. Peter Randall-Page
explains that he hopes his new works “are ambiguous and allude, by their form, to both erosion
and growth.”
Of his interest in growth and erosion, Randall-Page muses
“given a cast of a potato and a pebble,
side by side, one would be hard pressed to distinguish between the two.
Yet the processes, which
produced them are diametrically opposite. The pebble a product of erosion, the potato the result of
growth and expansion from within. Both seem to aspire to a minimum surface area to volume ratio
but neither achieve a perfect sphere.”
Carving and casting are arguably opposite processes: one
being a removal of matter and the other solidifying form from a negative space. In his new cast
bronzes, Randall-Page uses the ‘growth’ of the casting process alongside the ‘erosion’ of the
carving process.
The creation process is also inverted in a series of new works on paper. Images created from
dripping ink down paper are turned upside down to create organic tree-like forms that seem
to grow up the gallery walls. By allowing the ink to take its own path Randall-Page returns to
his preoccupation with chance and randomness, theme and variation. Like nature, the artist
encourages chance into regimented patterns. The resulting branching patterns allude to the
structure of plants and river deltas as well as neural and vascular systems. Philip Ball who has
written the essay to coincide with the exhibition notes:
“Peter’s works commonly come as a series: they are multiple expressions of a single underlying
idea, and only when viewed together do they give us a sense both of the fundamental generating
principle and its fecund creative potential. The diversity depends on chance, on happy accidents
or unplanned contingencies that allow the generative laws to unfold across rock or paper in ways
quite unforeseen and unforseeable.”
Upside Down & Inside Out
will be Peter Randall-Page’s first show at Pangolin London since he
staged the gallery’s inaugural exhibition in 2008. In 2007, in collaboration with the Ruwenzori
Sculpture Foundation and the London Sinfonietta, Peter Randall-Page visited the remote island
of Lolui in Lake Victoria to explore the prehistoric rock gongs and the ancient rock art. The rock
gong’s direct connection with human evolution and the birth of music and art offered Randall-
Page the inspiration to create a fresh new body of work that formed the exhibition
Rock Music
Rock Art
.
This solo exhibition represents a rare chance to see works of different scales and media by
an established sculptor who is widely known for his public commissions, two of which will
also be unveiled in September. All artworks are available for sale, prices start at £420. A fully
illustrated catalogue is available with an introductory essay by Philip Ball.