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Tom Luckey
American sculptor

Tom Luckey

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American sculptor
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Quantico
Place of death
New Haven
Age
72 years
Family
Children:
Spencer Luckey
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Thomas W. ("Tom") Luckey (January 6, 1940 – August 19, 2012) was an American architect and sculptor, best known for inventing abstract playgrounds called Luckey Climbers. Luckey also created furniture, merry-go-rounds, and interiors.

Life and career

After graduating from the Yale School of Architecture in the late 1960s, Luckey began remodeling friends' houses and doing experimental projects, including one described as transforming:

... part of a Vermont house into a "spooky space landscape," as one critic described it. Randomly placed steps, ramps, and terraces ascended to the ceiling, and surfaces were sheathed in woolly orange carpet. Elsewhere in the house, a cylindrical rotating room replicated the spatial transmutations of LSD with a bed that became the back of a sofa, a table that morphed into a seating platform that became a desk, and so on.

— Alastair Gordon, Spaced Out: Radical Environments of the Psychedelic Sixties

In addition to interiors and furniture, he also designed merry-go-rounds; one, inspired by square dances, moves riders from one seat to another as they go around.

A mutual friend introduced Luckey to Agnes Gund, who insisted he contact the Boston Children's Museum. After he persuaded officials to let him build his first Luckey Climber, the structure turned out to be one of the museum's most popular exhibits, and has now been replaced with a new version.

Luckey died on August 19, 2012 at Yale–New Haven Hospital due to complications from pneumonia. He was 72.

Luckey Climbers

Luckey Climbers are multi-story climbing structures crossed with mazes and jungle gyms. In appearance, they have been compared to "a Calder mobile fashioned from Monet's lily pads". They have been installed in locations across North America that include:

VenueLocation
Boston Children's MuseumBoston, Massachusetts
Children's Museum of PittsburghPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Young at Art MuseumDavie, Florida
Papalote museo del niño
(Papalote Children's Museum)
Mexico City, Mexico
Children's Discovery MuseumNormal, Illinois
Children's Museum of Winston-SalemWinston-Salem, North Carolina
Westfield Fox ValleyAurora, Illinois
Lincoln Park ZooChicago, Illinois
WonderLabBloomington, Indiana
Long Island Children's MuseumGarden City, New York
Children's Museum at HolyokeHolyoke, Massachusetts
Children's Museum of MemphisMemphis, Tennessee
The CommonsColumbus, Indiana
Children's Museum of Alamance CountyGraham, North Carolina
Westfield Century CityLos Angeles, California
Terry Lee Wells Nevada Discovery MuseumReno, Nevada
Children's Museum of South DakotaBrookings, South Dakota
Providence Children's MuseumProvidence, Rhode Island
Delaware Children's MuseumWilmington, Delaware
Children's Museum of the UpstateGreenville, South Carolina
Children's Museum of HoustonHouston, Texas
The Magic HouseKirkwood, Missouri
Kidspace Children's MuseumPasadena, California
Discovery PlaceCharlotte, North Carolina
Christ Community ChurchSt. Charles, Illinois

No major injuries have occurred on Luckey Climbers, and they have a clean safety record—which is one of the reasons why they are so desired by children's museums.

Luckey (documentary)

In 2005, Luckey fell out of a second-story bathroom window and landed on his head. As a result of a fractured cervical vertebra, Luckey was paralyzed from the neck down. He continued to design Luckey Climbers, at first with the assistance of his son, Spencer; the one at the Delaware Children's Museum was his first to be fully accessible.

Filmmaker Laura Longsworth made a 2008 documentary, Luckey, about the personal and professional repercussions of the accident. The film appeared at a number of festivals, including SxSW and the Independent Film Festival of Boston, and garnered the Special Jury Award for Artistic Portrait at the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival and Best Documentary Feature at the Indie Memphis Film Festival. The film has also been shown on the Sundance Channel.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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