JOOLS ART

Rabos
Jools
Rufus

Jools is a contemporary mixed-media collage artist whose practice engages directly with material reuse, visual appropriation and the psychological weight of images. Working with reclaimed panels, recycled boards, frames and cardboard, she creates layered compositions that exist between painting, assemblage and cultural archaeology.

Her practice draws on Robert Rauschenberg’s integration of image, gesture and recycled material — most notably in his Combines — alongside Rosalie Gascoigne’s use of salvaged materials and weathered surfaces as vessels of meaning. In dialogue with contemporary strategies of appropriation, Jools’s work also resonates with Richard Prince’s interrogation of authorship and cultural memory. Through personal, witty stencilled texts, instinctively shaped by the materials and images she works with, Jools reframes found elements as sites of reflection, humour and critique.

Based in Rabós, a small historic hamlet in the Alt Empordà region of Catalonia, Jools’s practice is shaped by a landscape defined by permanence, restraint and lived culture. Positioned between the Pyrenees foothills and the Mediterranean coast, Rabós sits a stone’s throw from Cadaqués, where Salvador Dalí lived and worked, trading surreal theatrics for a slower, more attentive relationship to material and place.

The cracked stone walls, agricultural rhythms, weathered surfaces and enduring human traces of the region echo the recurring themes that run through her work: memory, erosion and the surreal embedded within the everyday.

Jools’s practice is driven by a spontaneous and playful process. By fragmenting archival mid-century magazines and collaging them with contemporary pop imagery, she draws on whatever recycled materials are available — including, on the occasion, her own wardrobe — to bring texture, humour and personality into each piece. Guided by an ethos of trusting intuition, allowing a single idea to form the centre of a work and grow organically, Jools creates visually rich compositions that invite slow looking and quiet reflection. Her works unfold gradually, rewarding sustained attention and encouraging viewers to encounter memory, culture and material not as fixed or singular, but as layered, evolving spaces.

Scroll to Top