Whirligigs, Spinning Into Art History

City Connections, November 2011 from City of Wilson, NC on Vimeo.

DaySpring Media shot and posted a video about Vollis Simpson’s whirligigs and the Whirligig Park Project for Wilson, NC’s local government channel.

Whirligigs are well loved American folk-art. These whimsical caricatures of animals, planes, or farm equipment typically have blades that rotate in the wind and cause various parts of the sculpture to move. Ninety-three year old WWII veteran Vollis Simpson became a celebrity when the world outside his Lucama, NC home learned about his whirligigs.

What sets Vollis Simpson’s whirligigs (he calls them windmills) apart from others are the materials he uses, and the size of his masterpieces. Made almost entirely from salvaged materials: bearings, metal scraps, reflectors, road signs and license plates discarded from prisons, some of Simpson’s pieces are nearly 40’ tall! Even more amazing, he assembles, paints, and mounts the larger than life sculptures himself, and continues to create them almost daily.

Vollis SimpsonNow, a collaboration between Wilson Downtown Properties, the City of Wilson, the NC Arts Council, and others will ensure that Mr. Simpson’s art can be appreciated for generations to come. That collaboration, the Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park Project, will relocate 29 of the iconic structures to a 2-acre lot in downtown Wilson, NC. Prior to the park’s opening, the pieces are being restored to their original mechanical and aesthetic condition. The project has created jobs for local artisans and engineers, and is a key element of the city’s downtown revitalization efforts.

Savvy Award for Troubled Waters

3CMA Savvy Award

A video photographed and edited by DaySpring Media has won a Savvy Award. Presented by the City-County Communications and Marketing Association (3CMA), this Savvy award honors creative marketing and communications in the “One-time Special Programming” category.

Troubled Waters documents the possible long-term environmental effects of a proposed chicken processing facility, its waste sprayfield, and the hundreds of feeder farms it would bring to Wilson, Nash, and Edgecombe counties. Before the video, much of the publicly available information about the processing plant centered around the expected increase in jobs for the area.

Combining witness testimonies, industrial statistics, and on-location video, Troubled Waters looks beyond the jobs the plant would create, and focuses on the detrimental effects of excessive nutrient releases to the environment and water basin. Another highlighted issue is the difficulty in attracting high-tech industries to regions saturated with confined animal feeding operations.

The video is part of the City of Wilson’s ongoing effort to provide citizens with information to make informed decisions about the future of their environment and water supply. Troubled Waters can be seen in its entirety on Wilson, NC’s Vimeo network.

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