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For the last several years my sculptural work has become largely kinetic and interactive. It is often witty, profound and provocative. Much of it seems to exist in the realm of the unlikely. These days, my mind is in a whirl, trying to understand how to make very complicated things appear to be smooth, slow and coordinated.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

ARTSCOPE interview with Brian Golsow

A CONVERSATION WITH ANDREW M.K. WARREN AT THE DANFORTH MUSEUM OF ART, FRAMINGHAM, MASS. BRIAN GOSLOW CORNERED HIM AT THE OPENING RECEPTION FOR THE ANNUAL MEMBERS' JURIED EXHIBITION, "OFF THE WALL," AND "A COMMUNITY OF ARTISTS" ON JUNE 17, 2010.

Cornered: a conversation with an art museum attendee
Brian Goslow

What do you think of the show in general?

Warren: It has incredible depth; a wide range of things, particularly the kinetic stuff. Two pieces I saw were pretty mindblowing. (He’s talking about David A. Lang’s kinetic sculptures, “Play by Play” and “The Day the Castinetti Sisters First Learned to Fly.”) Did you see those?


I saw one that was made out of old radio parts...

Warren: That one you’re talking about (“Play by Play”) actually has a radio built into it so it broadcasts radio sounds. And the other one is incredibly intricate, delicate and beautiful. I would say those definitely were the showstoppers for me. Those things are amazing.


For the complete interview and coverage of the opening:

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