Randall Teal brings his passion and commitment to an array of artistic outlets By Sara Jarrett Oregon Daily Emerald Hanging in front of the wine-colored, dec orative curtain inside the University coffee shop, the images draw attention. Students waiting for their morning coffee, afternoon fix or late night tune-up, can’t help but be drawn to the stirring quality of the artist’s visions. Their lack of detail somehow makes them more descriptive. It’s as if the true essence of a single thought exists in each one. Randall Teal, creator of the 32 paintings, is a graduate student in the School of Archi tecture and Allied Arts, and a man of many interests. The guitarist, pianist, singer and painter grew up surrounded by the paint ings of his mother, a retired counselor who used art as therapy, so Teal’s curiosity of the arts was piqued at an early age. The 28-year-old eclecticist borrowed his mother’s acrylic paints seven years ago and eventually graduated to oils. His work is now regularly showcased in the Eugene area, and in addition to local coffee shops he has had exhibits at the Laveme Krause Gallery in Lawrence Hall. “He’s quite surprising,” says Alison Sny der, assistant professor in the architecture department, who served as Teal’s adviser for the paintings in The Buzz. “He doesn’t tell you what he’s working on, and then this whole body of work pops out. For instance, I had no idea that he was painting until about halfway through the project. ” With an undergraduate degree in psy chology, an interest in design and a back ground in observing the healing power of art in therapy, Teal sees his craft from many unique perspectives. In fact, he was tom be tween pursuing a master’s degree in archi tecture and following in his mother’s foot steps. His final decision to pursue design over art therapy stems from his need for “a bigger theatre to practice in,” he admits. “Art and design is a part of me,” he says. “Exploring creative ability within con straints is also psychologically interesting.” While a lot of artists don’t like putting boundaries around their work, Teal is not put off by the concept. While his process is sometimes to literally see what will happen if he picks up a paint brush during different emotional states, his work is often more structured than that. “While he s trying to work out his own theories [of art and design], he goes through a lot of trial and error,” Synder says. When Teal consciously decides to ex plore a certain emotion, he says that a paint ing can take months to perfect. That may sound like .a long time, but Teal is quick to point out that it’s months of “intense spurts,” rather than constantly working. The time he spends using this process is evident in the layers of colors and textures in much of his work. Mostly abstract in de sign, Teal’s paintings have both striking and calming characteristics. “Across Space and Time,” for instance, was inspired by the innovative, electronic musi cian John Cage, who once said that lines rep resent the interconnectedness of people in space and time. The painting is memorable not only because of the layers of burnt orange hues but also because of the linear black lines painted over the top. Aromas of humanity linger between the analytical designs. “This one took me forever,” Teal says, as he gazes at his creation. The layers represent inspiration — a notion that to him is like “brushing information on information. ” Sometimes the process of making art helps him resolve an upsetting emotional state. Before painting “Writing on the Wall,” Teal says he was very energetic and frustrat ed and in a confused state of mind. By the time the art piece was finished, however, he was no longer upset. His de scriptions of that process suggest that paint ing usually has such cathartic effects for him. Sometimes Teal doesn’t set out to paint a specific feeling at all but simply uses the process to reveal an emotional state he can’t identify; it took him a week to paint one ti tled “Thinking Out Loud. ” “I had lot of things that I needed to work out during this time,” Teal says. What came from this internal place is a painting that ex udes frustration and confusion, he reflect ed. The swirls of color and thick layers of indiscriminate strokes cause the same emo tional response in the observer. Always interested in the audience’s per ception of "his work, Teal enjoys hearing feedback before offering his own insights. He acknowledged that he likes to get peo ple talking. “This one creates a lot of discussion,” he says, pointing to one of his bigger paintings. “Confrontation,” a 4-by-9 piece, can be in terpreted as many things. At first glance it looks like an eye peering out from the center of a whirlpool of colors. The circle gets big ger and bigger until it reaches the end of the canvas and falls away to infinity. In creating it however, Teal says he tried to address what if feels like to acknowledge your own potential but be fearful of it at the same time. “I wanted to create, a feeling of unknown depth or layers,” he says. The observer is left to decide whether it’s frightening or ex citing, he explained. “You can stand and face it or move out. ” A simple strip of yellow, painted on one of the 4-foot ends provides the portal. Although Teal created it with a vertical orientation, “Confrontation” hangs hori zontally on the wall outside of the arcade in the EMU’s Break; it’s a change that Teal doesn’t mind. He actually thinks it’s inter esting that his work can be interpreted dif ferently with such a manipulation. Not all of Teal’s creations are completely abstract. “In Her Eyes” is an abstraction of something literal, the artist explains. It’s a portrait piece that attempts to create a deep er description of the subject than reproduc ing her physical attributes would. The fa miliar shapes of a moon, a sun and a cloud manifest themselves in blue and red sweeps of paint. Because Teal is also a musician, he feels a deep connection with that side of his cre ativity. One of his favorite painting process es is to turn on a favorite tune and let it guide his hand. “Sometimes I just want to explore what Bach is,” he says. He rarely envisions the final product dur ing those music-generated sessions. In the same vein, visions of colors are also infre quent — he usually lays his palate out in front of him and listens to which ones talk, he says. “I work with intent without attachment to results,” he says. The results, however, speak for them selves. “Randy doesn’t fit a mold,” Snyder says. “He has a more art school way of thinking, and he wants to bring it to his design work. He’s deeply committed to what he’s doing. ” Whether it’s an emotional exploration, musical expression or more literal interpre tation, each painting hanging in The Buzz is a unique complexity that awaits wandering eyes. Teal’s exhibit, “Disco very/Faith/Emo tion,” is currently on display at The Buzz until March 17. All paintings are for sale. The UO Cultural Forum, the exhibit’s spon sor, has a price list in its EMU office, Suite 2. * ii toirrriiirff‘'Wi lit mth • Photo illustration Azle Malinao-Alvarez Emerald Randall Teal, shown here working in his Lawrence Hall architecture studio, has 32 paintings hanging in The Buzz coffee shop.