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I am looking at a photo of Vollis Simpson, born 1919. He stands straight and tall in his yard, one hand resting on an enormous whirligig, the other on his hip. On his slim body he wears a plaid shirt tucked into jeans which are belted around what looks like a 33-inch waist. A baseball hat is pulled on his head. There is no waste on this man. Simpson, of Lucama, N.C., built his first whirligig to power a washing machine while stationed in Saipan, in the Mariana Islands, during World War II. After the War his continued interest in wind power promoted his building several other large windmills, one of which powered a heating system in his house. |
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| Simpson has made his living repairing machinery and designing and building equipment with which to move houses from one location to another.
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What is a whirligig? A whirligig is akin to a windmill. The minimum requirement for a whirligig is that it must revolve uselessly in the wind. The criteria for an "outsider art" windmill is that it must be made of used pieces of equipment, put together in some unique composition. The assemblage must catch the wind in such a way that it will cause the parts to move and produce sound. For Vollis Simpson, the structures may be covered with reflectors, as are the trees surrounding them, that they may be seen at night as well as in the day. Some of the things one can recognize as part of a whirligig are scaffolding, bicycle wheels, highway reflectors, model airplanes, multiple propellers, gigantic poles, street signs and even a revolving plumbing vent.
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| A whirligig can have cutouts of people in carts pulled by animals whose parts move when the wind catches them. It can have airplanes that soar, or giant pinwheels or cylinders that rotate. It can produce groaning noises or sounds like giant wind chimes.
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| Sometime in May 1996, Vollis Simpson, the champion of whirligigs and windmills, will travel to Atlanta, Ga., to set up the thousands of pounds of components that comprise the 40-feet tall windmills he's been commissioned to build for display at the Olympics. I wanted to speak with him before he left, so I phoned to ask a few questions.
Q: Does your building of whirligigs have anything to do with making use of abandoned industrial products?
Vollis Simpson is a man whose quest is to capture in the wind's moving force a thing of beauty, by means of dozens of propellers, producing haunting sounds. It is one man's act of chivalry to fight against the cast-off products of industry. Unlike the Don Quixote of Cervantes, whose windmills were the imaginary enemy, Vollis Simpson is in love with the way the captured wind provokes into action the hand-fashioned windmills he builds to decorate his property. Don Quixote's windmills of the mind are Simpson's quite real visual treats of color, motion and sound. On to the Olympics, Vollis! JANE M. JOEL is a free-lance writer in Richmond, Va.
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This article first appeared in The Folk Art Messenger Vol. 9, No.3, Spring 1996
You can order it for $15 now! |
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Folk Art Society of America P.O. Box 17041, Richmond, VA 23226 800-527-FOLK (3655) For more info: fasa@folkart.org http://www.folkart.org/ |
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