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Boat and Water-skier Whirligig
Boat and Water-skier Whirligig

Boat and Water-skier Whirligig

Date1993
DimensionsOverall: 12 × 20 3/8 × 12 in. (30.5 × 51.8 × 30.5 cm)
Object numberN0089.1995
Credit LineCollection of the Fenimore Art Museum. Gift of John J.Conroy
Photograph by Richard Walker
Label TextAlthough it has medieval European origins, the whirligig reached its fullest development in America. The form was probably derived from articualted dolls and was inspired by windmills. In America, whirligigs are found in two basic forms: a single figure with rotating arms, and a complex multi-part construction with gears and connecting rods transferring wind power into movement. Stark, a retired mechanic, transferred his ability and vocational training into smoothly balanced models of both delicacy and innovative forms that have an intriguing complexity of motion.
On View
Not on view
Hay Rake Whirligig
John Stark
1993
Quaker Whirligig
Unidentified Artist
c. 1900
Revolutionary Soldier Whirligig
Unidentified Artist
c. 1875
Boats of Venice
George Henry Smillie
ca. 1885
Untitled
J. Redpath
1858
Whaling Scene
C.W. B.
1892
View of New York Harbor
Edmund C. Coates
1837-1847
Untitled (Cooper)
Felix Octavius Carr Darley
n.d.

5798 STATE HIGHWAY 80
COOPERSTOWN NY, 13326
607-547-1400

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