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May 20, 2025
Minnesota father-son duo's mesmerizing kinetic sculptures featured on the national stage!
May 20, 2025
May 20, 2025
487561912_990386706530612_8164418758705175481_n.jpg
Apr 8, 2025
"In NW Minnesota, he turns gears, wire and marbles into art that moves". By Dan Gunderson Fergus Falls, Minn. March 31, 2025
Apr 8, 2025
Apr 8, 2025
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Jan 12, 2024
1000 Kinetic Sculpture: "Living an Artist's Dream" Article by Fergus Falls Daily Journal
Jan 12, 2024
Jan 12, 2024
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Jun 20, 2023
Meet Jeffrey Zachmann - Voyage Minnesota Local Stories
Jun 20, 2023
Jun 20, 2023
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May 5, 2022
POSTCARDS Pioneer PBS - Dragons, Gumballs, and Brews, Oh My! | Zachmann Family
May 5, 2022
May 5, 2022
Second Place at the 2021 St. Louis Art Fair!
Oct 13, 2021
Second Place at the 2021 St. Louis Art Fair!
Oct 13, 2021
Oct 13, 2021
Oct 13, 2021
Interview for the St. Louis Art Fair August 9th, 2021
Oct 13, 2021
Oct 13, 2021
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Jan 9, 2016
"Zachmann: Father and Son" Show Running Now Through March 5th
Jan 9, 2016
Jan 9, 2016
Jan 9, 2016
Daily Journal Discusses New Zachmann Studios Space
Jan 9, 2016
Jan 9, 2016
Jan 9, 2016
Zachmann Studios "Postcards" Episode Wins Emmy
Jan 9, 2016
Jan 9, 2016

Minnesota father-son duo's mesmerizing kinetic sculptures featured on the national stage!

May 20, 2025

How a Father and Son are Combining Engineering and Art. Jeffery Zachmann and his son Carl are kinetic sculptors in Fergus Falls, Minnesota.

MAY 18, 2025

In a small studio in Fergus Falls, the clinking and clanking of metal isn't noise, it's imagination in motion. Jeff Zachmann and his son Carl are kinetic sculptors, building mesmerizing, moving works of art that blend engineering and creativity.

"I'm having the most fun," Jeff Zachmann said. "I live an artist's dream life."

Together, the father and son travel the country showcasing and selling their sculptures. Their work has been featured in museums, hospitals, airports, private collections, even the Las Vegas Strip.

For Jeff Zachmann, the journey started in childhood. Growing up in the Twin Cities suburbs, construction sites became makeshift playgrounds.

"I would go out with my friends and my sisters and we'd build trails and tunnels for marbles," he said. "That's how it all started."

He eventually went on to become a potter, crafting functional ceramic pieces for marbles to glide through. But he found clay too limiting. So he shifted to metal. After a few early prototypes, he was hesitant to show his work publicly.

"My wife said, 'Jeff, you should do an art show with these.' And I was like, 'I've never seen anything like this. People are just going to laugh at me,'" he recalled.

But to his surprise, people were fascinated.

"Things just took off," Jeff Zachmann said. "Within six months, I didn't have time to do any pottery anymore at all."

His third exhibit was at the prestigious Smithsonian Craft Show in Washington, D.C. 

"About an hour into it, these guys in their really expensive suits were on their knees, playing with these pieces on the ground," he said. "And I was like, 'Jeez, I've got something here.'"

More than 1,100 sculptures later, he still finds joy in every project, especially because he gets to work alongside his son.

"Working with my son is amazing. It really is," he said.

Carl Zachmann feels the same.

"My father is one of the only people that I've ever encountered who thinks like me," he said. "This is just where all my interests in art, history and engineering just kind of all come together."

While the elder Zachmann focuses on tracks and rolling marbles, the younger one pieces lean more into gears and mechanical motion. Their styles are distinct, but complementary.

They don't plan on slowing down anytime soon. As long as there are ideas to build and marbles to roll, the Zachmanns will keep creating.

"The one on my bench right now is number 1,137," Jeff Zachmann said.

Their goal is simple: to spark a smile, a laugh, a moment of connection.

"I think so many of us have so many things going on in our lives, so much stress, that I like to give a little island of calm and happiness to people," Jeff Zachmann said.

"Art is about making people feel," Carl Zachmann added. "It can make you feel happy, it can make you feel sad, it can make you feel angry. And it just so happens that my father and I bring joy and happiness."

For the son, the work is both a calling and a privilege.

"It's a gift to be able to do engineering and art and see where they take you," he said.

Interview by: Joe Van Ryn is a Multi-Skilled Journalist at WCCO-TV.

"In NW Minnesota, he turns gears, wire and marbles into art that moves". By Dan Gunderson Fergus Falls, Minn. March 31, 2025

April 08, 2025

Article Link: https://www.mprnews.org/story/2025/03/31/in-nw-minnesota-he-turns-gears-wire-and-marbles-into-art-that-moves?fbclid=IwY2xjawJigdVleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHsYl9lbCCH8e8opyPkHHadfubejLcIjA0qbN6FQJ3nPMZX091TGG1SfXleht_aem_Wm3voi-hWwh2XNcTKoLGuw

Playing with Marbles for a Living! Read Jeff's interview with MPR News!

Jeffrey Zachmann, a kinetic sculptor from Fergus Falls, MN, has built over 1,000 mesmerizing sculptures that set marbles in motion! His work can be found in art shows, exhibitions, and collections across the U.S. and worldwide, from children’s hospitals to private homes.

Each piece invites interaction—sparking curiosity, joy, and nostalgia. Inspired by childhood memories of playing with marbles and scavenging materials, Jeff’s sculptures transform static metal into dynamic, captivating motion.

At Zachmann Studios, he works alongside his son, Carl, keeping the magic of kinetic art alive.

Jeffrey Zachmann has built more than 1,000 kinetic sculptures that incorporate wire, metal and moving marbles. He loves the interaction with people who can't resist his work.

Jeffrey Zachmann 1000 Kinetic Sculpture Private Collection of Kaddatz Galleries

1000 Kinetic Sculpture: "Living an Artist's Dream" Article by Fergus Falls Daily Journal

January 12, 2024

Website Link: https://www.fergusfallsjournal.com/living-an-artists-dream/article_4974513c-56b6-11ec-b66d-571fa2648804.html

By Mary Bethel Olson The Daily Journal Dec 7, 2021 Updated Jan 12, 2023

Jeff Zachmann grew up just north of Minneapolis. The suburbs were booming at that time and he and his sisters and friends found themselves playing in a big pile of dirt left over by various construction projects. They would create tunnel systems in the big pile and send marbles through them.

That’s where Zachmann first found his love for kinetic sculpture.

Years later, the successful artist now lives in Fergus Falls and recently displayed his 1,000th sculpture during the Over the River Holiday Festival over the weekend.

“Yeah, it’s kind of weird to think that I’ve done a thousand of these things,” said Zachmann, who started selling his sculptures in 1993.

He is a master at kinetic sculpture, working with metal and motors that carry balls around and within the sculpture in a peaceful, beautiful manner.

“I’m really happy with this piece,” said Zachmann about his 1,000th sculpture. “I think this is probably the nicest piece I’ve ever done. I took my time on this and really … this is the one I did because it’s what I wanted to do, more than anything.”

Often when making a sculpture, he has to keep in mind what other people might want or what a commissioner requests. “That being said,” he smiled, “I guess just about every (sculpture) is doing what I want anyway.”

Zachmann’s work is located all around the world at museums, hospitals, airports, within famous people’s homes and even on the Vegas Strip.

His sculptures are captivating. Equally mechanical and creative. The marbles or balls flow in a way that is calming, yet they break repetition just enough to gently hold the watcher’s interest.

When he shows at art shows, he jokes he’s like “the cute guy at the bar” — 20 to 30 people will be at his booth throughout the entire show. “It still just floors me.”

“I’m interested in how people think,” he explained. “When I’m at an art show and people are looking at all of these sculptures, I don’t look at the sculptures. I know what they do. I’m looking at the people … what’s going on inside their head?”

He also intentionally makes his sculptures soothing. “Everybody has a lot of stress and worries in their life. Everybody does,” he said. “And this sculpture lets them get away from that for a while. All of a sudden they can forget everything else and just look at how the balls are rolling.”

Zachmann has had a long and fruitful career making his sculptures. “I really live an artist’s dream life,” he shared, reflecting on the milestone of making his 1,000th piece.

“It just makes me stop and think of how fortunate I am as an artist ... as an artist I pretty much do what I want when I want to do it,” he explained. “I don’t know how else to put it, I’m just so fortunate. And the 1,000th piece makes me just stop and think … 1,000 pieces … that’s a lot of artwork … and I’m still enjoying it.”

Meet Jeffrey Zachmann - Voyage Minnesota Local Stories

June 20, 2023

Website: https://voyageminnesota.com/interview/meet-jeffrey-zachmann-of-fergus-falls-mn/?fbclid=IwAR3pnn4cSCLDqWDTPw6mAbroUFruWbQQahpGtIJ1u2V5qUQmfFXHuTKSpD0

Hi Jeffrey, thanks for joining us today. We’d love for you to start by introducing yourself.
When I was going for my art degree at Moorhead State University my ceramics instructor gave us the assignment to make something non-functional. I remembered a time when I was 8 yrs old rolling marbles down trails and tunnels I and my friends built in some huge piles of dirt. For the ceramics project, I hand-built slab pots with holes and trails for balls to run down. It was a lot of fun.

After graduation in 1980, I became a full-time functional potter, supporting my family for 15 years by selling pottery at art shows. Now and then I would build one of my marble trail pots but it never worked very well. Clay shrinks as it dries so the balls sometimes got stuck. Clay also is soft when built and then hard when fired so there was no way to tell how the ball would roll when making it and of course no way to modify it when finished and fired.

One weekend I was sitting at an art show with my pottery and across the aisle was a metal sculptor with a shape similar to the ball sculpture I was working on it was one of those slap-in-the-forehead moments. Just because I’m a potter doesn’t mean I have to work in clay! I already knew how to weld having built my pottery equipment.

After I built a number of these new metal sculptures my wife tried to talk me into showing them at art shows like I was doing with the pottery. I resisted for a while, thinking this was my weird quirk, I’d never seen anything like this before. I thought people would just laugh at me and no one would pay what I would have to ask.

She finally talked me into it when in 1993 we were helping with an art show here in Fergus Falls and we needed more artists. It turned out to be quite fun showing what I was doing to my friends and community. The second show I did was small in Minneapolis and I sold a couple of sculptures! The third show I got into was the prestigious Smithsonian Craft Show in Washington DC. and things took off.

In 6 months, I no longer had time to do any pottery. Since then it’s been pretty much non-stop. I live an artist’s dream with collectors and installations worldwide. While I could sell my work through galleries I prefer to sell through art shows where I can meet and talk with the viewers and collectors myself. I love to watch people newly exposed to my sculptures.

I’m sure you wouldn’t say it’s been obstacle free, but so far would you say the journey have been a fairly smooth road?
I have been very fortunate that my success has had very few stumbles or struggles.

Can you tell our readers more about what you do and what you think sets you apart from others?
Ever since I was a child, I have worked on mechanical devices and kinetic sculptures. I find fascination in mechanical movements of almost any kind. With a blend of old and new materials, physics, and art, my work pulls out the memories and experiences of the viewer’s childhood and brings them back to that time.

Watching the viewer, this transformation is usually apparent. As children, people are more at ease, adult tensions drop away, and they are more open to laughing, pointing, and talking with strangers. After watching the sculpture for a while, stand back and watch the people near you. Welcome to my childhood.

I make kinetic sculptures from stainless steel and found metal and glass balls. The movement is started with a battery-powered motor, then gravity takes over. I am fortunate that I’m one of only a handful of people worldwide that makes this type of sculpture.

Networking and finding a mentor can have a positive impact on one’s life and career. Any advice?
I had the unique situation that I didn’t have a mentor for the sculpture I am doing. I found I needed to correlate what I wanted to learn to other fields. I did a lot of reading and study on metal fabrication methods. Networking has been through getting to know other artists at art shows.

Pricing:

  • The sculptures I bring to my shows vary in price from $4,000. to $17,000.

  • The sculptures that are commissioned can be much bigger

Contact Info:

  • Website: Zachmann.com

  • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jeff.zachmann/

POSTCARDS Pioneer PBS - Dragons, Gumballs, and Brews, Oh My! | Zachmann Family

May 05, 2022

Website: https://www.pioneer.org/postcards

Jeffrey Zachmann, kinetic sculptor, and Carl Zachmann, machine artist, are a father-son duo from Fergus Falls who have collaborated on many art projects during their careers. Jeff's pieces are sold all over the world and recently his 1,000th kinetic sculpture was put on display at the Kaddatz Gallery in downtown Fergus Falls. In 2015, Postcards made an award-winning story about the Zachmanns and now Postcards returns to learn about the new projects and experiences they've had in the seven years since. This new story features a striking COVID-19 era kinetic sculpture fire pit that attracted a surprising amount of attention, a giant gumball machine sculpture in Las Vegas, and the brewery at the site of their new studio. Jeff Zachmann, his wife Deb, brewer Andy Beck, his wife Klara, and Klara’s parent’s, Scott and Kathy Wagnild, undertook the task of turning an old industrial building into a brewery and taproom called Fergus Brewing Co. This Art has it's Gears in Motion | Season 13, Episode 13 | Aired 5/5/22 Postcards is an award-winning series showcasing the arts, history, and cultural heritage of western Minnesota and beyond. Funding for Postcards comes from the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund.

Second Place at the 2021 St. Louis Art Fair!

October 13, 2021

Jeffrey Zachmann won 2nd Place for his Metal Kinetic Sculptures this year at the Saint Louis Art! He is honored that he received this award and is looking forward to returning to the Saint Louis Art Fair in 2022!

Source: https://www.saintlouisartfair.com/saint-lo...

Interview for the St. Louis Art Fair August 9th, 2021

October 13, 2021

Youtube Link to Interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkPQicF7pmU

Check out the interview that Jeffrey did for the 2021 St Louis Art! Jeff talks about his work, his process and why he makes the incredible Metal Kinetic Sculptures.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkPQicF7pm...
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"Zachmann: Father and Son" Show Running Now Through March 5th

January 09, 2016

Jeffrey and Carl Zachmann's joint show, Zachmann: Father and Son, runs Jan. 4, 2016 through March 5, 2016. The show is located in the Lake Region Arts Council gallery, 133 S. Mill St., Fergus Falls, MN 56537. 

The Artist Reception will be Tuesday, Jan. 19 from 5:00-6:30 pm. 

Don't miss it!

Daily Journal Discusses New Zachmann Studios Space

January 09, 2016
The Fergus Falls Daily Journal

Zachmann Studios "Postcards" Episode Wins Emmy

January 09, 2016
Pioneer Wins Upper Midwest Emmy Award for Story About Fergus Falls' Kinetic Sculptors
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email: info@zachmann.com
phone: (218) 205 - 2311