Education
He studied sculpture at Bath Academy of Art from 1973-1977.
He studied sculpture at Bath Academy of Art from 1973-1977.
Peter Randall-Page"s work is held in numerous public and private collections throughout the world including Japan, South of Korea, Australia, United States of America, Eire, Germany and the Netherlands. Closer to home, a selection of his public sculptures can be found in London, Edinburgh, Manchester, Bristol and Newbury and he is represented in the permanent collections of the Tate Gallery and the British Museum. His practice has always been informed and inspired by the study of organic form and its subjective impact on our emotions and the use of incredible detail.
In recent years his work has become increasingly concerned with the underlying principles determining growth and the forms it produces.
In his words "geometry is the theme on which nature plays her infinite variations, fundamental mathematical principle become a kind of pattern book from which nature constructs the most complex and sophisticated structures."
Randall-Page was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts in 2015 and is referred to as a Royal Academician allowing the use of Research Associate after his name. Arnolfini Collection Trust, Bristol
The British Council.
The British Embassy, Dublin
The British Museum
Bughley Sculpture Garden
Castle Museum and Art Gallery, Nottingham
The Contemporary Art Society, London
The Creasy Collection of Contemporary Art, Salisbury
Derby Arboretum
Leeds City Art Galleries
Lincoln City Council
Milton Keynes Community National Health Service Trust
The National Trust Foundation for Art
Nottinghamshire City Council
University of Nottingham
Prior’s Court School for Autistic Children, Thatcham
University of Tasmania
Tate Collection. "Where the Bee Sucks"(1991)
Ulster Museum, Belfast
Usher Gallery, Lincolnshire County Council
University of Warwick, Coventry
West Kent College, Tonbridge
The Eden Centre, Cornwall
The National Portrait Gallery collection has a 2003 bromide print of Randall-Page.
Peter Randall-Page talks about his sculpture.
Womb Tomb.
Quotations: "geometry is the theme on which nature plays her infinite variations, fundamental mathematical principle become a kind of pattern book from which nature constructs the most complex and sophisticated structures.".
He was a member of the design team for the Education Resource Centre (The Core) at the Eden Project in Cornwall, influencing the overall design of the building and incorporating an enormous granite sculpture (‘Seed’) at its heart.