Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Early 60's Richard Faralla





Made of salvaged wood and mirror. Scored this nice abstract piece on my recent trip to San Francisco to escape the smoke and heat of LA.

Richard Faralla- Sculptor 1916-1996

Attended CSFA (F.F.A. in 1955) and San Francisco State College 1956. Previously a painter, he turned in 1959 to sculptures and reliefs assembled from small scraps of wood, which he generally painted black or white; like the wood sculptures of Louise Nevelson, they were built around an essentially Cubist formal vocabulary, animated by a Byzantine intricacy of surface pattern and richness of texture. His earliest works were mosaics made of geometric bits of wood gathered from construction sites. In the early 1960's he began to use driftwood and his constructions became more organic.

from "Art in the San Francisco Bay Area" 

by Thomas Albright.