Built by Dmytro Szylak, a retired General Motors assembly line worker, it started out as a simple hobby.
But it quickly grew to be a towering assemblage of hand-carved and found objects, two-stories tall and miraculously teetering between the two garages of the retired Ukranian auto worker. The mass of materials spins and sways in the wind and lights up at night, while traditional Ukranian folk music pours out of the attached speakers.
Interwoven into the sculpture are reindeer, American patriotic symbolism of all kinds, oddly placed dolls, bold paint colors, trilingual press clippings and banners, wind-powered oddities, repurposed lawn ornaments, a model of Mickey Mouse in a plane, mini cars on the ground, toys galore, and painted bits of wood and steel—all of which has been gloriously wired with lights and sound.
Unlike many other hermetic outsider artists, Dmytro is quite approachable and will give you a personal tour of the site for a small donation. Among the perks of the tour are seeing Dmytro turn on many of the various moving parts of the building-engulfing sculpture that aren't usually turned on. It is a testament to Dmytro's construction skill that the structure has survived the harsh Michigan winters so well.
Known by locals as the "Hamtramck Disneyland," the work of art doesn't have an official name. If there is one thing everyone agrees upon, it's that you can't really understand the sculpture until you see it.
