Reuben Margolin's moving sculptures combine the logic of math with the sensuousness of nature.
Why you should listen to him:
Reuben Margolin makes wave-like sculptures that undulate, spiral, bob and dip in gloriously natural-seeming ways, driven by arrays of cogs and gears. As a kid, Margolin was into math and physics; at college, he switched to liberal arts and ended up studying painting in Italy and Russia. Inspired by the movement of a little green caterpillar, he began trying to capture movements of nature in sculptural form. Now, at his studio in Emeryville, California, he makes large-scale undulating installations of wood and recycled stuff. He also makes pedal-powered rickshaws and has collaborated on several large-scale pedal-powered vehicles.
"It's not like I'm trying to copy nature -- I'm trying to relate to it."
Reuben Margolin
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Quotes by Reuben Margolin
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“This tension between the need to look deeper and the beauty in the immediacy of the world … is what makes [my] sculptures move.”
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“What if every seemingly isolated object was actually just where the continuous wave of that object poked through into our world?”
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“The Earth is neither flat nor round; it's wavy.”
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