Starr Kempf

Starr Gideon Kempf (August 13, 1917 in Bluffton, Ohio – April 7, 1995 in Colorado Springs, Colorado) was an American sculptor, architect, and artist best known for his graceful steel wind kinetic sculptures.
Personal life
Starr Kempf was raised on a small farm in Ohio, near the Swiss Mennonite community of Bluffton. His family, including his father and seven uncles, were blacksmiths and carpenters, from whom he learned craftsmanship and engineering at an early age.
He attended the Cleveland Institute of Art on a scholarship, where he received high marks for his paintings and drawings. After graduating, he served in the United States Air Force during World War II. He married recent German immigrant Hedwig Roelen in 1942, who was a nurse at Glockner Penrose Hospital in Colorado Springs. In 1948, they purchased the property of their future home in Cheyenne Canyon, where Starr designed and built a house and art studio. They had three children.
Kempf had been injured several times and experienced chronic pain.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref> He was a heavy drinker and had "temper tantrums", once shooting one of his sculptures.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref>
Artwork
Starr began to work in bronze sculpture in 1955, which he sold to collectors around the United States.<ref name=":1" />
As of 1977, his vision had blossomed into the creation of elaborate steel wind sculptures, each of which took him up to three years to construct. His kinetic wind sculptures were designed to exhibit graceful movement and interaction with the wind, with a few powering spotlights to showcase his pieces and one that triggered music as it rotated. His work often took the form of birds or weather vanes. His monumental sculptures often stood more than fifty feet in height. He never sold any of his monumentals.<ref name=":0" />
At the time of his death, there were 10 or 12 significant sculptures displayed outside his home.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":0" /> He designed them for their original sites, and hoped that the city or the University of Colorado Colorado Springs would turn his home into a museum after his death.<ref name=":0" /> However, no contract was signed before he died.<ref name=":3" />
Death and legacy
Starr Kempf was diagnosed with heart disease in 1994. He died on April 7, 1995, at the age of 77.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite web</ref> The cause of death was suicide.<ref name=":3" />
After his death, his youngest daughter, Lottie Kempf, tried to turn the property into a for-profit art museum,<ref name=":2" /> called the Starr Kempf Sculpture Garden and Gallery, bringing in tour buses full of paying visitors.<ref name=":3" /> This led to conflicts with neighbors and the city over excessive traffic, placement of sculptures too close to the property lines, and related nuisances in the residential neighborhood.<ref name=":3" /> Lottie Kempf subscribed to pseudolegal ideas and declared that their home was exempt from city laws and zoning ordinances, which prohibited commercial businesses in the neighborhood and sculptures above a certain height.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite news</ref> At one point, she filed a pro se lawsuit alleging that her nephew and the city council were the "agents of principal Kofi Annan" (the secretary general of the United Nations at the time).<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" /> In 1999, the city sued to prevent further commercial activities.<ref name=":4" /> The lawsuit and subsequent media coverage resulted in hate mail and harassment of the neighbors.<ref name=":4" /> In 2003, the dispute was resolved with an order to remove eight of Kempf's sculptures, and the family began the removal process, over Lottie's objections.<ref name=":4" /> By 2024, all but four had been removed.<ref name=":0" />
Three of the monumental kinetic sculptures were moved to a public park, Creekwalk, in nearby Cheyenne Canyon.<ref name=":0" /> Three others – "Sunrise Serenade," "Metronome" and "Space Needle" – have been loaned to the University of Colorado Colorado Springs' Ent Center for the Arts until 2034,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and a pendulum-based one was installed at Plaza of the Rockies in downtown Colorado Springs.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The family organized an exhibition of his bronze works in 2007.<ref name=":1" />
Kempf's work was honored in 2024 with an exhibition by dozens of artists in the Pikes Peak region, called "We Are The Sky".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
References
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External links
- Video interview, showing some of his monumentals and his bronzes
- News collection at Pikes Peak Library District
- Architects from Colorado
- American male sculptors
- American modern sculptors
- Sculptors from Colorado
- Artists who died by suicide
- Suicides by firearm in Colorado
- 1917 births
- 1995 deaths
- 20th-century American architects
- 20th-century American sculptors
- Sculptors from Ohio
- Architects from Ohio
- 1995 suicides
- 20th-century American male artists
- People from Colorado Springs, Colorado