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Artist

Brian Lensink

United States

Born in 1946

Joined Artisor: October 2025

Artist Stats

Total pieces for sale: 6

Bio

I have been working with my hands and with tools for as long as I can remember. My interest in art and sculpture came later in life. As a child I would be making things all the time and had my own toolbox. During high school I enjoyed all my shop and art classes and always was able to get A’s, which was a nice balance to some of the grades in courses I didn’t enjoy quite as much. These interests led me to a major in Industrial Arts Education at the University of Minnesota. While at the University, I focused my studies on the areas of graphic arts, woodworking, metalworking, and photography. I minored in Special Education with a specialty in developmental disabilities.

Upon graduation in 1968, the Special Education minor won out when I was faced with the real life decision of “making a living”, but the ability to work with my hands and with tools continued to be a major interest and brought great satisfaction. I went on to get a masters degree in educational administration. Ultimately I was the State director of developmental disability services in Arizona, Colorado and Connecticut where tremendous work was done to transform how services were provided to people with disabilities and their families. In 1978, I visited an art exhibition that was to be a “life changing event” for me – the Calder’s Universe Exhibition. I was absolutely captivated by Calder’s work and his ingenious designs, whimsical imagination, and creative use of materials. That captivation has never subsided whether the medium is metal or as now, wood.

It was at that moment in 1978 that I decided to dedicate my creative energy and skill to making mobiles and stabiles and other “Sculpture in Motion”. In 2012 my interest expanded to woodturning. I have made several hundred moving sculptures over the years and recently many wood turned vessels and other wood objects. I have exhibited at several galleries over the years including the Nina Kuzina Gallery in Nashville, Tennessee and the Faust Gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona and Santa Fe, New Mexico and the Grace Renee Gallery in Carefree, Arizona. I also sell my work t. wo art fairs in Arizona, one in March at the Tucson Museum of Art and one at a studio tour called Hidden In The Hills in Cave Creek, Arizona. Now that I have retired from my primary career I am building another and it is great fun.

I am very lucky to have a wonderful wife, Barbara, who is also talented, and very tolerant. I have three adult children with families and a yellow lab, Billy, who is always begging for my attention.

Bio Author: Brian Lensink

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Artists Statement

Woodturning is an art form with few limitations. By combining components, I can create just about any shape or size of object and by arranging different wood species, I can create many surface designs. There are few art forms that give you this type of freedom. This lack of restriction keeps your mind engaged – contemplating the possibilities. You are continually thinking about the next design and solving the challenges presented by the next project. I love working with wood and it come from all corners of the earth. Beautiful wood is a magical medium; gallery visitors love to touch the surfaces to feel the shape, texture or smoothness of the wood. Mobiles made of wood extends this challenge adding movement created by the circulation of air or a gently touch. I do this work because it is fun and because I enjoy the look on peoples faces when they touch and feel a vessel or bowl, use a beautiful pepper mill or watch a mobile move in the breeze.

No previous artwork sold