
Rand's paintings confront fundamental questions of reality and existence through a raucous, uninhibited visual language that’s rooted in memory and lived experience. Raised in 1950s Brooklyn, he drew early inspiration from comics and illustrators like Will Eisner and Maurice Sendak, whose caricature informs his persistent sense of unease. Fairy tale iconography—clowns, knights, witches—collides with real life anxieties and vulnerability. Working in series, his deeply autobiographical canvases transform intimate memory into elaborate, corporeal worlds.