"Radebaugh recognizes nature's beauty not in its literal forms, but in the abstract shapes comprising all that he sees. Thes organic pieces and patterns are brought into focus in his ... paintings."
Stefanie Laufersweiler
Sketchbook Confidential, 2010
"If Pollack and others of the abstract expressionist school freed line and form from their traditional roles in painting, Radebaugh has responded to their spontaneity and extended it with his almost self-conscious linear detailing."
Douglas Kent Hall
Mass: Of Our
World Alan Paine Radebaugh, 2009
"The artist would rather us not take his shapes so literally, since to do so only limits their possibilities. Like Aristotle, the perceptible qualities of an object such as it's color, texture, size, and shaper are meter accidents that mask the essential thing in itself. It is the sense of accumulation that counts more than the identity of one part of the whole."
Robert Ware, Curator, Jonson Gallery, University of New Mexico Art Museum
Introductory Essay, Alan Paine Radebaugh Mass: Of Our
World, 2007
"[Radebaugh's] post-modernist abstract expressionist style focuses on a fragmented experience of the landscape. [His] surfaces celebrate nature like a Gerard Manley Hopkins poem."
Wesley Pulkka
Southwestern Landscapes - New Mexico Artists, Collectors Guide, 2005
"These deceptively simple depictions of shapes found in nature ... are comforting reminders of the power and mystery of the earth and its organisms. Radebaugh's work is a revelation."
Steve Robert Allen
The Best of 2002 in Arts and Literature, Alibi January, 2003
"Fragments and inferences make up our consciousness. Art transforms our perception into wholeness. APR is an artist who understands these verities, and who maintains a clear and down-to-earth viewpoint about them."
Suzanne Deats
Abstract Art: The New Mexican Artist Series, 2003
"Most days Radebaugh takes to the field, wandering trails and roads with his sketch pad ... In the night he turns the floodlights onto his canvases and with patient accuracy, turns what he had found in the daytime into art."
Stephen Kuno
Crowsnest Pass Promoter, 2002