Rosenbaum's initial interest in
art glass led him to enroll in courses at
Virginia Commonwealth University specifically for
glass blowing and
casting. One of his first major sculptures, a piece which he called
Shoah, was constructed of
wrought iron meant to remind the viewer of
concentration camp gates, glass intended to recall
Kristallnacht, a rotating "
searchlight," rocks and wood. Rosenbaum’s Shoah is now on permanent display at the Virginia Holocaust Museum. In an interview, Rosembaum said that he had seen a wide range of reactions to this specific sculpture, "from the little ones trying to climb inside to the tears of the elderly." Rosenbaum produced his first one-man art show at the
Valentine Museum in 1997. His work had received awards from art shows as far from Virginia as
Pennsylvania and
Michigan.
Death Al Rosenbaum died on April 11, 2009, at the age of 82. He was a resident of Richmond, Virginia, at the time. He was buried in
Forest Lawn Cemetery. ==References==