Ice Cream Scoop Whirligig
Date1995
Artist
Vollis Simpson (1919-2013)
MediumPaint on metal with reflective coating and plastic film
DimensionsOverall: 27 x 19 x 18 3/4in. (68.6 x 48.3 x 47.6cm)
Credit LineGift of Ellin and Baron Gordon
Object number2006.801.1
DescriptionA freestanding metal sculpture having a yellow-painted ball on a circular-based stand. Four ice cream scoops extend outward from the central stand below the ball; their bases are cut off, leaving the bowls on shortened lengths of their stems; they are set at right angles to one another. Four more scoops extend outwards from the ball, their stems passing through red or white stars. A metal finial tops the ball; it can be pulled straight up to disconnect the ball from the stand.Label TextArtist Vollis Simpson first harnessed the power of wind to drive a washing machine he constructed at his station in the Marianas Islands during the Second World War. His ingenious large-scale, wind activated sculptures delighted viewers and earned him accolades during his lifetime. In 2013, the year of his death, North Carolina named the whirligig the official state folk art. In addition to his large scale works, Simpson made tabletop assemblages. An example is this colorful confection studded with ice cream scoops and metal stars cut from cast-off reflective highway signs. It, too, turns in the breeze.
ProvenanceThe Gordons, AARFAM's donors, bought this scupture directly from the artist in July 1995.
Exhibition(s)
1994
ca. 1760
1815-1820
1800-1815
1800
ca. 1765 case; ca. 1740 movement
ca. 1800
1691-1697
1790-1800
Ca. 1725
ca. 1775 (movement); 1805-1815 (case)