But a great many things came out right at Long Island City's Empire Bronze Foundry in the 1980s, mostly because of Brian Ramnarine. The stout, thick-fingered artisan owned and operated the foundry for more than a decade, achieving a great deal of notoriety in the world of fine sculpture along the way. The role of a metal foundry is to execute an artistic work in perfect replica; to take an original form in clay or plaster or carved stone and render it in cold metal. And for a period beginning in the late '80s and lasting through the late '90s, only a few dozen artisans in the United States, maybe fewer, could handle bronze like Ramnarine.
A Guyanese immigrant of almost unbelievably humble beginnings, Ramnarine, at the height of his success, was producing work for some of the world's most acclaimed sculptors β artists like Jasper Johns and Robert Indiana, who entrusted Ramnarine with their work and their legacy.
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