George Rhoads' ball machine sculptures

George Rhoads' ball machine sculptures

Randomizing pendulums, a wooden hammer chime, a bounce and catch, and two hammer bells: This limited edition Summer Fantasy Ball Machine Sculpture was designed by artist George Rhoads and fabricated by the team at Creative Machines. From The New York Times:

Mr. Rhoads’s colorful “audio-kinetic ball machines,” which evoked the workings of watches and roller coasters, were built of comically designed tracks and devices like loop-the-loops and helical ramps, and were usually six- to 10-feet high. Scores of the machines have been installed in children’s hospitals, malls, science museums and airports and elsewhere in a dozen countries, but mostly in the United States and Japan.

Rhoads’ inspirations included sculptor and mobile artist Alexander Calder, cartoonist and inventor Rube Goldberg, and Swiss sculptor Jean Tinguely.

winter fantasy

Enjoy a few close-ups in this Winter Fantasy edition video from Creative Machines:


winter fantasy

Mr. Rhoads believed the appeal of his creations was their openness — as if each viewer were wearing a loupe and were examining the insides of a 1900s Waltham pocket watch.

“Machines are interesting to everybody but people usually don’t understand them because, as in a gasoline engine, the fun part goes on inside the cylinder,” he said. “So I’ve restricted myself to mechanisms you can see and understand quickly.

Here’s another video of the sculpture. It’s set against dark moving blanket so that the balls are more visible:


Watch more ball machine videos next on TKSST:
• Steel track rolling ball sculptures by Tom Harold
The Works Museum’s 115,000+ piece K’NEX Ball Machine
• LittleBall Creations’ Marble Machine Medley
• Scott Weaver’s ‘Rolling through the Bay’ toothpick sculpture
• Blue Marble 3, a two-table Kaplamino chain reaction marble run

ncG1vNJzZmismJq4qrDSoaaupJSosqbAx6KqZ5ufonyxu9KtZqCdn6e0pnnRoaaanKNir6K4y2akmpuYnrumedKcrKWopKq%2Fpr8%3D

Chauncey Koziol

Update: 2024-01-05

You Might Also Like