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This relief originally hung over the Postmaster's door and was done under the Section of Fine Arts Public Buildings Administration Federal Works Agency. Fredericks received this commission as a result of an honorable mention in the Section of Fine Arts World's Fair Competition. &#13;
	A mare and colt dominate the center portion of the relief.  Balancing on either side are a ewe with two lambs and a sow with one of her pudgy shoats.  Each of the animals expresses a vitality that suggests the active life and abounding health of the locality.&#13;
&#13;
Molly Barth copy:&#13;
The next relief is the model for Farm Animals.  A terracotta cast is located at the post office in Sandwich, Illinois.  The mare and colt and pigs and sheep with the little lambs represent farming, the chief industry in Sandwich, Illinois at that point in time, 19??.  [comment on W.P.A.]  </text>
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&#13;
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	&#13;
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&#13;
An image of this relief can be seen on page 36 of the book Marshall M. Fredericks, Sculptor.</text>
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              <text>MF, Sculptor copy:&#13;
"Union Station on Fort Street in Detroit was a landmark of nineteenth-century Romanesque architecture used by the Chesapeake and Ohio, Baltimore and Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wabash railroads. Passengers left from its platforms for the great ports of the Atlantic coast south of New York, and for St. Louis and the West. When it was remodeled and modernized after the war, Fredericks was asked to do something on the long narrow band of wall over the doors through which travelers passed to the train platforms. On what would appear an awkwardly long and constricted span, Fredericks executed in polished aluminum a free-floating relief, forty-four feet long, which he called The Romance of Transportation (figs. 150-153). Beginning at the left with the opening of the West-Indians, a wagon train, stagecoaches, highwaymen-the relief swells into a crescendo of railroads and a streamlined train, then tapers off through airplanes and automobiles, to motorcycles and bicycles. The successive forms flow into each other, accentuated by the gleam of hammered and polished aluminum, leading the eye easily from one end to the other of a symbolic history of a people in movement. The relief was put in place in 1950. Subsequently, as the railroads' passenger traffic declined, the Fort Street Station, as it was popularly known, was demolished. The relief was removed to the Railroad Museum in Baltimore, where it remains on view."&#13;
&#13;
The work displays the 4th dimension--time. It shows a progression of time in methods of transportation from horses and man-powered vehicles to engine powered vehicles.&#13;
&#13;
Two motifs are located next to it:&#13;
&#13;
Molly Barth's copy:&#13;
The long relief on the west wall of the gallery is titled The Romance of Transportation.  This plaster model has been painted silver because it was cast in aluminum.   The aluminum cast was dedicated in 1951 at the Fort Street Railroad Station in downtown Detroit during a major renovation of the building which was built in 18??.  They commissioned Fredericks to make a relief for a long, narrow space above the gates to the train platforms.  In this design, the diesel locomotives are intermixed with the older forms of transportation.  On the left are Indians and the covered wagons, and stagecoaches.  The locomotives in the center are the powerful ones.  Notice also the cars, airplanes, bicycles, and the motorcycle and dog on the far right.  Once  trains ceased to be a popular mode of transportation, with airplanes being so much faster, the depot was closed and then demolished, I believe in 1970.  The aluminum cast of this relief and the two reliefs above the exit sign here in the Gallery.  Modern Trains, and Horse and Antique Trains, which were also done for the Fort Street Station were removed.  They were then sent to the Baltimore Railroad Museum, where they are (hopefully) on exhibit now.  [Discuss plaster model sections of original model, some sections made from aluminum cast in Detroit.]  </text>
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Animal sculpture--20th century</text>
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                <text>Romance of Transportation, 1951&#13;
Plaster original painted silver&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
This 44-foot long relief mural was originally located at the Fort Street Union Depot in Detroit, Michigan.  It has since been relocated to the &#13;
B. &amp; O. Railroad Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.  This plaster original is painted silver to more closely resemble the original cast in aluminum.  Because it is so long, it was cast in twelve sections, then welded together.&#13;
&#13;
This sculpted mural depicts the development of transportation in America.  &#13;
According to the dedication program:&#13;
 &#13;
"Fredericks chose the modern steam locomotive and a streamlined diesel, which he contrasted with older modes of travel to form a panoramic history of transportation in America (including) Indian riders of the plains, the ox-drawn prairie schooners and stage coaches of the western pioneers, and one of the first wood-burning locomotives.  On the right are the high wheel bikes of the 1890s, the runabout and touring car of the early 1900s, the first airplane, and another wood burning locomotive of civil war vintage. The work was designed to convey the impression of life and motion, and at the same time, create sustained interest by depicting many forms of old-time transportation."&#13;
&#13;
When Fredericks first started to do the design for this sculpture he thought of using many forms of transportation rather than just a large train.  He claimed it would be "more interesting for people."  These same themes are incorporated into the two reliefs centered below The Romance of Transportation, Modern Trains and Horse and Antique Trains.  These were located at the main entrance of the Fort Street Union Depot. </text>
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                <text>Use of this image requires permission from the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum</text>
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              <text>The "S" was a prototype of the Model T.   The panel was carved on buff Carrara limestone in 1939.&#13;
&#13;
MF archives:&#13;
Fredericks carved the original limestone relief that was placed in the public lobby of the Post Office.  He received this commission as a result of an honorable mention in a section of Fine Arts Competition.&#13;
	Because the automobile industry was the most important factor in the development of the Detroit area, the sculptor has chosen to depict one of the very early cars.  The "horseless carriage", with its two occupants, speeds along, leaving a trail of dust and smoke.  Two children and a dog run delightedly beside the car while pigs and chickens flee in terror.</text>
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                <text>Figure sculpture, American--20th century&#13;
Animal sculpture--20th century</text>
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                <text>Horseless Carriage (Model S. Ford, Children and Animals Sunday Afternoon), 1939&#13;
Plaster original&#13;
&#13;
Fredericks designed and carved the original limestone relief that was placed in the public lobby of the Post Office in River Rouge, Michigan.  He received this commission as a result of an honorable mention in a section of Fine Arts Competition at the World's Fair in New York in 1939.&#13;
&#13;
Because the automobile industry was the most important factor in the development of the Detroit area, the sculptor chose to depict one of the very early cars.  The "horseless carriage," with its two occupants, speeds along leaving a trail of dust and smoke.  Two children and a dog run delightedly beside the car while pigs, chickens, and a startled bird dart away in terror.</text>
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                <text>Fredericks, Marshall M., 1908-1998</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="429678">
                <text>Use of this image requires permission from the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum</text>
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              <text>On the right, the Civil War Pylon shows Abraham Lincoln parting the North and South. Below are Generals Grant and Lee. The Founding of Detroit Pylon on the left depicts the French explorer, Antione de la Mothe de Cadillac, who founded Detroit in 1701. Below Cadillac is Father Gabriel Richard who made important contributions to the early spiritual, educational and cultural life of Detroit. Other pylons include Indian Wars, Battle of the Great Lakes, Spanish-American War, Battle of Lake Erie, War of 1812, WWII, and the Peace pylon. The Peace pylon is engraved, "In the hearts of all mankind is the Eternal Hope for Universal Peace."&#13;
&#13;
Fredericks stated about the Victory Eagle:&#13;
"The problem was to take a natural object, one especially familiar to everyone, and simplify it in form to something almost architectural in quality, absolutely abstract in form and line, to tie in with the masses and character of the building, yet retain the character and meaning of the natural object. Also, it was necessary to indicate power and motion of the eagle, still make it an integral part of the marble wall, solid yet mobile; an architectural entity, and yet imbue it with the spirit of life."&#13;
&#13;
As a result of this sculpture, Fredericks was awarded the American Institute of Arts Medal in 1952, a distinction awarded only five times between 1914 and 1998. In 1953, he was awarded an honorary life membership in the Michigan Society of Architects as the first sculptor to be honored by them.</text>
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Plaster original&#13;
&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.068&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Victory Eagle on the facade of the Veterans Memorial Building in Detroit is 30 feet high and projects 4-Â½ feet from the wall in high relief. The museum displays the quarter-scale version and two of the seven free-standing pylons originally placed in front of the building along the walkway leading to the entrance. The pylons were later moved next to the building parallel to the facade. Twenty feet high and carved with incised relief, they depict scenes from important events in the city's history. Here, the Founding of Detroit Pylon and Civil War Pylon frame either side of The Victory Eagle.</text>
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                <text>Fredericks, Marshall M., 1908-1998</text>
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                <text>1950</text>
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                <text>Use of this image requires permission from the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum</text>
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                <text>University Center (Mich.)</text>
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              <text>1991.067   </text>
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              <text>On the wall, we have the "Veterans' Memorial Eagle," this is just the quarter scale.  As we go along through the Gallery, I'll be mentioning, quarter-scale, 1/3 scale, or full-scale.  This one, as I mentioned, is the "Eagle" from the Veterans' Memorial Building that's down there on Jefferson Avenue in Detroit, which runs parallel with the Detroit River.  This is just the quarter-scale eagle.   The Eagle that's on the Veterans' Building is 30 feet tall, and it projects out four feet from the facade of the building.  The Eagle, when it was originally quarried--it was carved from Vermont marble, and when it was quarried, there were 11 blocks and all together, they weighed 210 tons.  The largest ever quarried, the largest block ever quarried, was quarried for this eagle; that alone weighed 86 tons.  This was quarried in Danbury, Vermont.  There's a large mountain there and they pulled this one block out that weighed 86 tons, and they got it out into the sunlight, and they saw that there was a slight flaw in it, so instead of taking the risk that it might crack, they chose to quarry, Mr. Fredericks did, to quarry another one just as large as that one that weighed 86 tons.  The "Eagle," as you hurtle by automobile on Jefferson Avenue catches your eye.  It really personalizes the building; the wings of the "Eagle," forming a "V" for victory, and, of course, for veterans.  And then, in his talons, his claws, he is holding the laurel and the palm, which stand for glory and for victory.  There are also seven free-standing pylons, as you walk up to the building, each telling a different story of American history.  We have two pylons here in the Gallery.  The pylon on the right that flanks the eagle is the "Civil War "pylon.  On it you see Abraham Lincoln and the parting of the North and South, and General Grant and General Lee.  The pylon on the left is the French explorer, Cadillac.  Of course, the French founded Detroit in 1701.  Beneath Cadillac on the pylon is Father Gabriel Richard.  Both of these pylons give an example of incised, low-relief carving.  They are carved into the marble, as opposed to the "Eagle" where it's coming out at you.  The pylons were also carved in Vermont marble. Later the city of Detroit, without Mr. Fredericks' knowledge, they moved the pylons, and now they are parallel with the building.  Before they formed, sort of a right angle, so they gave almost a one-point perspective.  They also, without notifying Mr. Fredericks, they sand-blasted them, they thought that was the proper way of cleaning them, but they could not have done a worse thing to them, because sand-blasting actually bit into the stone and removed some of the very fine detail of the carving.  Mr. Fredericks really did personalize the building, and he worked right along with the architect.  His work is "public sculpture."  Really, architecture and sculpture go hand-in-hand.  They had to design a special support-system for the "Eagle" that was built right into the wall, the facade of the building.  Really, Mr. Fredericks wears many hats, an engineer, and architect and, of course, master sculptor.  Let me tell you a story.  When they were hoisting one portion of the left wing of the "Eagle," the cable where the crane was lifting it, the cable snapped, and down went one portion of that wing, but luckily, it was just swallowed in the construction mud, and they were able to rinse it off and just lift it back up there, but if it had cracked, and Mr. Fredericks had delayed the construction crew, he would have had to pay for every day that he delayed them.  But luckily, that didn't happen.  You don't realize the hurdles that you really have to get over, you know, putting these large, monumental pieces up.  The Veterans' Memorial Building was dedicated in 1950. I will check that date, but I'm pretty sure that's it.  It took him four years from start to finish for the "Eagle" and the pylons, but he also did another, the "Seal of the United States" that's right to the side of the entrance to the Veterans' Memorial Building.  It's on the red granite marble wall, and then the bronze casting of the "Great Seal of the United States," that's there by the entrance to the building.&#13;
&#13;
From 1995 Mary Iorio of Cranbrook, interview with Fredericks: In describing the building for the sculpture he said, "It was a war memorial and there were windows all the way across the whole building on all four sides and there was a little space for the relief.  I saw it and I didn't say anything.  But I made a scale model out of wood and took all the windows off the front and put the eagle on there.  The architect came out to see it and was really pleased.  He changed all the drawings.  Otherwise, I don't think I would have ever gotten that job."</text>
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                <text>Animal sculpture--20th century</text>
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                <text>Plaster relief ogf an eagle with wings upward in flight.  The composition is angular with hard lines.  There are several stars on the otherwise flat background.&#13;
The American Eagle was  created for the John Weld Peck Federal Building in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1964.  </text>
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                <text>Use of this image requires permission from the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum</text>
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