What) Local sculptor Allen Christian established the House of Balls in Minneapolis’ Warehouse District almost 20 years ago as a physical incarnation of his idea that, “we all possess the creative impulse and we owe ourselves the balls to express it.” 

    Originating from Christian’s belief that inanimate objects acquire a tangible life force when they come into contact with living beings, Christian opened the House of Balls as a public space. Guests are greeted with an open door policy in which, no matter the hour, an unlocked front door serves as an invitation for all to enter and explore unique sculptures and curious animatronics. Rooms packed with touchable, lovingly-crafted art give way to successive recesses of reanimated plumbing parts, false teeth, pistons, headstones, typewriter guts, pianos and, of course, the eponymous bowling balls.

    Should one happen to arrive at an off-hour, visitors can push a series of buttons to animate sculptures just inside the lighted windows. Depending on the button you push you will hear a cacophony of recitations and testimonies left by past wanderers answering various questions.  Besides exploring, visitors are also encouraged to ‘leave their treatise’ at the intercom, contributing their voice to the perpetually looping audio that issues from the House of Balls. (1)

    Where) 212 3rd Avenue North      free     1-612-332-3992

    Why) I have created many different things over the years and I have come to expect little or no praise for my efforts.  Although this response used to bother me, I have come to understand and accept it.  I guess it is enough for me just to satisfy my own creative impulses.



















We arrived on a cold Saturday morning at 10:00am.  I could not convince Pam to wait around another 2 hours to see if it would open.










I did enjoy this strange rotating head that could be seen through the window and...










... I know that I would have enjoyed these two statues if we could have gotten inside. (2)









(2)