CHAPTER AND VERSE
RANDY WRAY
The sculptures, paintings, and drawings in Randy Wray's exhibition Chapter and Verse, take a variety of approaches to the subject of Faith. Diverse styles, materials and perspectives converge to form a psychic cubism of formally intense and unconventionally beautiful manifestations. By joining ambiguous forms with images of webs, crosses, and the American flag, the artist achieves works rife with symbolic interpretations. Titles such as Dark Matter, Faith Collider, Toward a Unified Theory, and Apparition, evoke the language of both the laboratory and the pulpit drawing comparisons between science and religion. The works produced are themselves affirmations of faith, even as they raise questions regarding spirituality, patriotism, and belief in things unseen.
In a hanging sculpture titled Higgs boson, Wray gives form to a hypothetical particle of physics. He also references the ritual flower offerings made in sixth century Buddhist temples that later became known as ikebana. Dispensing with the plants, he composes shredded paper, quartz crystals, and electric lights in his offerings and calls them Ickybana. In a series of collages entitled Offal, Wray collects the debris generated as by-products during his sculpture making and painting practice and recycles it. These compositions of scrap paint and paper are mounted in his own frames fashioned from sticks, papier-mâché, and even small geodes, giving them an almost Victorian appeal. The artist's relatively restrained sculpture Sanctuary counterbalances the curvaceous and flamboyant Preacher's Daughter suggesting a penchant for the philosophizing of both the Dalai Lama and Dolly Parton.
Wray's conglomerations of seemingly contradictory ideas and impulses appropriately echo the polarities inherent in discussions of faith. While it is interesting to consider the juxtapositions of synthetic and natural materials, or representational imagery and passages of pure material gesture, it is clear that polemic distinctions are beside the point. The energy that pulses throughout the works creates infinite invisible paths of connection while Wray's handiwork provides further evidence that God is in the details.
Randy Wray's work has appeared in numerous solo and group exhibitions, and most recently at Kate MacGarry Gallery, London. In 2002 Wray received a Guggenheim fellowship and in 2003 had his first solo museum show at the Weatherspoon Art Museum. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
April 27, 2007