Randy Lee Cutler

Professor

Availability:

Education:

PhD, Cultural History, Royal College of Art, UK
MA, History of Art, University of Toronto
BA, Art History

Bio

Randy Lee Cutler is an interdisciplinary artist, writer and educator. She has a PhD in Cultural History from the Royal College of Art and an MA in the History of Art from the University of Toronto. Her work has shown nationally and internationally including Gallery 881 in Vancouver, Spring Art Show on Salt Spring Island, Into Nature Biennale in the Netherlands, Wil Aballe Art Projects in Vancouver and the Sydney Biennale NIRIN 2020.

Websites:


Research Interests

Taking the form of walks, performance, collage, printed matter, sound installation and creative/critical writing, Randy’s practice weaves together themes of materiality and intuition. Working with a range of artistic strategies, she is invested in how science fiction and science fact highlight an emergent understanding of lived experience. She has produced numerous hybrid projects that engage with conversation, place-making, and science to connect with audiences in diverse ways. Recent projects include Interdimensional Worlds (2025), an artist book and exhibition channeling the Qabala and ancestral inheritance, and OTOH (On the Other Hand, 2022), an artist book and exhibition exploring pandemic discourse through theories of race and representation. Randy is interested in art and science, ecological practices, performance art, media art, visual art, intuition and mysticism


Thesis Supervision

MFA supervision

24/25 Courses

Course Name Department Course Code Term
Graduate Studies Masters GSMA 600 26/SP

Description

This course supports the finalization of students' thesis projects and support materials through to completion by providing a platform for the discussion of their practice, research, and position. By the end of the course, students will have rehearsed their thesis presentations and planned the installation and/or presentation of their thesis work.

Pre-requisites

No prerequisites.

Graduate Studies Masters GSMA 600 26/SP

Description

This course supports the finalization of students' thesis projects and support materials through to completion by providing a platform for the discussion of their practice, research, and position. By the end of the course, students will have rehearsed their thesis presentations and planned the installation and/or presentation of their thesis work.

Pre-requisites

No prerequisites.