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&#13;
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1991.011&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
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Plaster original &#13;
&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.013&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
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Plaster original &#13;
&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.014&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
In a videotaped interview in 1987, Fredericks stated:&#13;
&#13;
"I think any artist who forgets nature is losing a great deal of his life. Nature is so full, so manifold. The animal and bird kingdoms, the plant kingdoms, and all those kingdoms are such a wonderful expression of nature, we must appreciate them. There is something so touching about these non-human creatures. I find it very interesting to combine the two. " </text>
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Memo dated September 25, 1991&#13;
&#13;
"RE: Four Animal Kingdoms&#13;
&#13;
While I was doing the inventory at the studio Molly told me that the sculpture titled Meditation from 1937 was a study for the Four Animal Kingdoms.  It is a female figure in the same position but she is not holding anything in her lap."</text>
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&#13;
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1991.011&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mammal Kingdom (seal), 1987&#13;
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&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.012&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Reptile Kingdom (crocodile), 1987&#13;
Plaster original &#13;
&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.013&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
Bird Kingdom (swan), 1987&#13;
Plaster original &#13;
&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.014&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
"I think any artist who forgets nature is losing a great deal of his life. Nature is so full, so manifold. The animal and bird kingdoms, the plant kingdoms, and all those kingdoms are such a wonderful expression of nature, we must appreciate them. There is something so touching about these non-human creatures. I find it very interesting to combine the two. " </text>
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              <text>From Jennifer Lentz (Collection Documentation Intern 1991-1992)&#13;
Memo dated February 12, 1992:&#13;
&#13;
"RE: Leaping Gazelle at Marselisborg Castle&#13;
&#13;
I asked Molly if this bronze cast from 190 is accessible to the public. She said it is not. Marselisborg Castle is the summer residence of the Queen on Denmark."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MF archives:&#13;
-First commissioned work he was paid to do in the late 1930s&#13;
-located in the formal garden west of the Conservatory.&#13;
-in 1935 a national competition was held for the design of a suitable tribute to Mr. Levi Barbour, a leading citizen of Detroit. Barbour, also an attorney and philanthropist, led the fight to purchase Belle Isle for a city park.  He willed $20,000 to the city "for the purpose of erecting some statue, monument, or other permanent structure on Belle Isle, as I had much to do with procuring the island for a park" Out of 26 models submitted by local and national sculptors for this contest, "Leaping Gazelle" was chosen in 1936. &#13;
-winning this contest helped to launch his career as a public sculptor and made his name know as a sculptor&#13;
-the gazelle is in a position called "wheeling;" that is when an animal is being pursued by a predator they stop and change direction to loose the predator&#13;
-the gazelle is not native to Michigan so he made four animals that are native to Belle Island to be placed around the gazelle on Belle Isle:  otter, grouse, hawk, rabbit&#13;
-the inscription on the rim of the lower basin quotes Barbour: "A continual hint to my fellow citizens to devote themselves to the benefit and pleasure of the public." &#13;
-This fountain is aligned with the Conservatory's central building whose circular shape is repeated in the fountain's two stepped basins.  A spirited bronze gazelle, its head thrown back, leaps off a stylized rock at the fountain's apex.  At the corners of the base of the pedestal are the four animals, native to Belle Isle, carved in granite.&#13;
-when asked why a gazelle, Marshall claimed "a wounded or leaping antelope attempts to show the beauty in the excitement, or even death, of nature."  He also stated for the Detroit News at the dedication on June 25, 1937 "to me it is the most beautiful animal in nature, particularly in that position." (Michael Panhorst)&#13;
- it is placed central in the museum as it was a centrally important piece to him&#13;
-a bronze of gazelle is found on Marshall's grave in Greenwood Cemetery, Birmingham, MI&#13;
-it was one of four purchase prize winners of a nationwide open sculpture competition sponsored by Brookgreen Gardens in 1972.  Brookgreen Gardens American Achievement Award, designed by Fredericks in 1986, utilizes the gazelle theme as does Brookgreen Gardens' membership Medal 1977-78.&#13;
&#13;
MF, Sculptor copy:&#13;
The commission that started Fredericks on his real career came when he won a national competition for the design of a fountain to be erected on Belle Isle, a city of Detroit park on an island in the river between the United States and Canada. The central figure of the Levi L. Barbour Memorial Fountain is a leaping gazelle, in bronze on a granite pedestal, the whole sixteen feet high, rising from a basin into which jets of water fall, forming a circular screen of water. A circular wall of verdure surrounds the fountain; its four entrances or axes are marked by four small carved granite beasts and birds positioned in the falling water. The clear, strong silhouette of the gazelle, the stylized modeling of the smaller animals, and the appeal of the animal subject to visitors of every age combined to form the happy debut of a monumental sculptor.&#13;
&#13;
Molly Barth copy: &#13;
The Leaping Gazelle in the center of the gallery is the plaster model for the Levi L. Barbour Memorial on Belle Isle in the Detroit River, between Detroit and Windsor.  It was a national competition, and Fredericks went up against some very famous sculptors, Paul Manship, and others, and he won it.  It started his career as a monumental sculptor.  The gazelle, as he has captured it, it is elegant and beautiful, as it rears its head back.  The gazelle was cast in bronze, and mounted on a granite pedestal with a fluted edge at the very top of the pedestal.  Fredericks wanted to depict the animals that you would find on Belle Isle, so he added four small animals: the otter, with it's dinner it has just caught; the grouse; the rabbit with its flopped over ears and cotton tail on a cabbage, and the hawk.  These were all carved in granite for Belle Isle.  The sculpture was dedicated in 1936, when Fredericks was just a young man.  It really started his career as a monumental sculptor.  	A bronze cast of the Leaping Gazelle is located on campus.  It was donated.  It's also a fountain.  Then at Brookgreen Gardens, in South Carolina, they have the whole fountain with The Leaping Gazelle and the four animals there.  There's also The Leaping Gazelle, only The Leaping Gazelle it was put up as a memorial in Norway for the Americans and the Norwegians; and also just dedicated last year, was The Leaping Gazelle, just The Leaping Gazelle, in bronze, down in Florida in the gardens in West Palm Beach.  Then also, Fredericks does have a Leaping Gazelle in his back yard, in his garden.  [Marseilles Borg also.]&#13;
&#13;
These four large sculptures surrounding The Leaping Gazelle Fountain, are not part of The Leaping Gazelle Fountain.  They are The Four Animal Kingdoms.  Each represents a different kingdom.  You have the Bird Kingdom, with the swan, the Fish Kingdom,  the Mammal Kingdom, with the seal, and then the Reptile Kingdom with the crocodile.  Each one has a female figure entwined, wrapping the animal and the human figure around each other.  These exist nowhere else but in the gallery, in the plaster.  They were intended to be carved in stone.  You can see how the shapes are contained within the contours or outline of the sculpture.  One form flows into the other.  Sculpture entices you to walk around them trying to see the detail in each one.  Notice the way the wings of the swan wrap themselves around the perimeter of the sculpture.  The fish, look for their fins, and the crocodile's tail wraps around. &#13;
&#13;
From 1995 Mary Iorio of Cranbrook, interview with Fredericks: Fredericks said it is, "the epitome of art deco design."&#13;
&#13;
From the MFSM Archives (originally found: series VI, subseries scrapbook, 1935-39):&#13;
To the Levi L. Barbour Memorial Committee&#13;
This model is submitted by Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
Instructor in sculpture at Cranbrook Academy of Art&#13;
&#13;
This fountain, the model of which is in one-ninth scale, is to be at the widest point twenty five feet in diameter. The large scale model of the antelope is one-third size and the one of the weasel approximately actual size.&#13;
&#13;
The material will be polished Rosetta Black Granite from northern Minnesota with the five figures in verde antique green bronze.&#13;
&#13;
The central figure showing the wounded or leaping antelope attempts to show the beauty iin the excitement, or even death, of nature; while the four smaller figures of the weasel, hawk, squirrel and pheasant, all native to Belle Isla and Michigan, represent both the predatory and non-predatory, trying to show the natural beauty in both.&#13;
&#13;
Water will spray in fine streams from the outside edge of the smaller basin into the larger.&#13;
&#13;
The memorial plaque of bronze, also, with suitable inscription, will be placed on the rim of the main basin.</text>
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In 1936, Fredericks won a National Award Competition to design a fountain for the Levi L. Barbour Memorial, located on Belle Isle, an island park in the city of Detroit, Michigan. The bronze Leaping Gazelle is mounted 16 feet high on a granite pedestal in a fountain basin. Four small carved granite animals: otter, grouse, hawk, and rabbit surround the gazelle. This was the first commission Fredericks received and it initiated his career as a distinguished public sculptor.&#13;
&#13;
Fredericks said:&#13;
 "I used this gazelle which to me has always been, in my mind at least, sort of the perfection of the four-legged. It's such a clean animal, it's herbivorous, it's the fastest animal alive, it's not a hunter, it's just a marvelous expression of the animal kingdom, and the lines of it are so beautiful and it just seemed to set itself up as a natural in that marvelous natural environment which Belle Isle was at that time, it was beautiful."&#13;
&#13;
The Leaping Gazelle is one of the most duplicated of Fredericks' sculptures. It can be found at numerous locations; nationally and internationally, including Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, Michigan; the Detroit Zoological Park, Detroit, Michigan; Gardens Mall, West Palm Beach, Florida; and Brookgreen Gardens, at Pawley's Island, South Carolina, where it was one of four purchase prize winners of a nationwide open sculpture competition in 1972.</text>
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&#13;
The female figure is also reclining.  Here arms are held above her head.  She is supported by a large bird and has a bird perched on her hand.&#13;
&#13;
From Archives, written by Melissa Ford:&#13;
Marshall Fredericks frequently used the figure of a swan in his sculptures. Many cultures feature swans in their mythology and folklore. Swans have come to symbolize fidelity and purity and are associated with music, poetry and divination. Fredericks often employed the swan as a symbol of resurrection and eternal life in his sculptures. Wings of the Morning, Freedom of the Human Spirit, and Indian and Wilds Swans as well as several other works feature swans.&#13;
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&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.020&#13;
&#13;
The Night and Day Fountain was commissioned for the Henry J. McMorran Auditorium in Port Huron, Michigan.  Fredericks also created a gold anodized aluminum Sculptured Clock on the building that was completed two years before the fountain's installation. The sculptures and clock were conceived as a unified design concept. &#13;
&#13;
In keeping with a long tradition in western art, the sculptor personified time with figures representing night and day.  Night has long, smooth, graceful curves that are repeated in the lines of the swan in flight beneath her.  In comparison, Day is more angular and his muscles are more pronounced, as are the veins in the arms and hands.  Day rests upon an otter, hunting in a school of Northern pike and Night floats upon a swan in flight, holding a small bird in her hand.&#13;
&#13;
The Night and Day Fountain can also be seen in the Sculpture Garden.  An image of the clock and sculptures can be seen on page 141 of Marshall M. Fredericks, Sculptor.</text>
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              <text>The male figure is laying on his back with his arms extended.  He is resting on a school of fish and a turtle.  He holds a fish in one hand.&#13;
&#13;
The female figure is also reclining.  Here arms are held above her head.  She is supported by a large bird and has a bird perched on her hand.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Symbols:&#13;
Male with pike: provider&#13;
Pike: A freshwater game fish, common to Michigan, of the Northern Hemisphere, having a long snout and attaining a length of over four feet..&#13;
Otter: symbol of courage; male attribute; Native American: associated with women and healing; helper, leading a hero out of trouble or a seaman to shore.&#13;
&#13;
Female with bird: nurturer&#13;
Bird: connection between heaven and material world; sun, &#13;
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&#13;
Another symbolic connection that can be explored is that Apollo and Artemis were twins.  Their father was Zeus and mother was Titaness Leto.  Artemis, Goddess of the Hunt was also referred to as god of Dark of the Moon. Apollo is associated with god of Light.&#13;
&#13;
Molly Barth copy:&#13;
These two large reclining figures are Night and Day.  These are the plaster models for the bronze figures that are in the fountain in the sculpture garden.  These were done originally for a fountain at the Henry J. McMorran Memorial Auditorium in downtown Port Huron.  The fountain was a memorial to McMorran, who was in the railroad business.  He was the president, and when he held board meetings he would be right outside the door, and if one person was even a minute late, he would shut the doors so they were unable to get into the meeting.  As Fredericks researched McMorran, he found out that he was very precise, so Fredericks designed a 20-foot-diameter clock as part of the memorial.  It was cast in aluminum and gold anodized. [Attention]  It was, as I mentioned, 20 feet in diameter.  Nothing, at that time, had been done like this.  It was filigreed so it was quite a task for the foundry to cast this, but it worked and it is magnificent!  It is lit from behind.  It shows the blossoming of flowers.  This 20-foot-diameter gold anodized clock is on the facade of the building and it lights up with a soft golden glow.  Down below in the fountain are Night and Day.  Also on the facade of the building are 13 stars that are randomly placed.  They light up also.  It took Fredericks six years to complete this project.  It was dedicated in 1964. It was rededicated in 1986, I believe.  [check date]  I have seen it at dusk and at night, and it's beautiful the way it lights up.  I love the otter and the pike with their fierce looking teeth beneath the male figure of Day.  Notice the slightest indication of scales here and there on the fish.  It's beautiful for a fountain piece!  As he's being taken off by the otter.  And, of course, the female figure, Night as she's flying off on the swan.&#13;
&#13;
From Archives, written by Melissa Ford:&#13;
Marshall Fredericks frequently used the figure of a swan in his sculptures. Many cultures feature swans in their mythology and folklore. Swans have come to symbolize fidelity and purity and are associated with music, poetry and divination. Fredericks often employed the swan as a symbol of resurrection and eternal life in his sculptures. Wings of the Morning, Freedom of the Human Spirit, and Indian and Wilds Swans as well as several other works feature swans.&#13;
	It seems that Fredericks' possessed a deep love and appreciation for these beautiful and graceful creatures. Besides sculpting swans, Fredericks played an integral role in a swan nesting project during the 1960s. As a civic gesture to his hometown of Birmingham, Michigan, Fredericks presented two pairs of swans to the city. The Australian Black and White Mute swans made their home in Quarton Lake located in the heart of the city. Unfortunately, several of the birds did not fare well in their new surroundings had to be replaced by the city of Birmingham.&#13;
	During the 1970s, in order to protect the swans and encourage nesting, the parks department constructed a bird sanctuary in the middle of the lake. This tiny floating island, constructed of several government surplus "life rafts", was approximately thirty-five feet in diameter and covered in a vegetative screen of wild grasses and rushes. Each winter, the swans would be removed from the lake and provided with shelter by the parks department until spring when they would return to the water.  The swans would then spend the rest of spring, summer and early fall on Quarton Lake being enjoyed by passing residents and visitors. &#13;
	As Fredericks' home in Birmingham overlooked Quarton Lake, it is quite plausible that one of these birds served as a real life inspiration for the swans often found in Marshall Fredericks' work. </text>
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Plaster original&#13;
&#13;
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks&#13;
1991.021&#13;
&#13;
The Night and Day Fountain was commissioned for the Henry J. McMorran Auditorium in Port Huron, Michigan. Fredericks also designed a gold anodized aluminum Sculptured Clock on the building which was completed two years before the fountain's installation. The sculptures and clock, though, were conceived as a whole.  An image of the sculptures and clock can be seen on page 141 of Marshall M. Fredericks, Sculptor.&#13;
&#13;
In keeping with a long tradition in western art, the sculptor personified time with figures representing night and day.  Night has long, smooth, graceful curves, which are repeated in the lines of the swan in flight beneath her.  In comparison, Day is more angular and his muscles are more pronounced, as are the veins in the arms and hands.  Day rests upon an otter which is hunting in a school of Northern pike and night floats upon a swan in flight, holding a small bird in her hand.&#13;
&#13;
The Night and Day Fountain can also be seen in the Sculpture Garden.</text>
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              <text>The eagle is ready to pounce on an unsuspecting prey.  The head is lowered and the talons are extended.&#13;
&#13;
Cast by Roman Bronze Works&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MF, Sculptor copy:&#13;
The War Memorial in the United States&#13;
The war memorial as an expression of proud and tragic memories came into prominence as a theme of sculpture after the Civil War. Often that tragedy was represented in terms of the individual soldier-the bronze infantryman quietly standing guard-an image which spoke so eloquently to our country that it was repeated in a thousand towns and villages. In more heroic form, the Civil War was commemorated by a general on horseback, as if at the head of his volunteer soldiers. In the vast wars of our century the individual was submerged and generals no longer rode at the head of their troops. Memories of those who served were commemorated impersonally by a flame, a sports stadium, a civic auditorium. Fredericks planned one such dramatic, impersonal commemoration of Bataan, but it was never executed.&#13;
When asked to do a war memorial for the University of Michigan in 1950, he turned again to the symbolic eagle, which he had used in the Veterans Memorial Building in Detroit. The American Eagle in Ann Arbor is a fierce, combative image of courage and strength. A heroic bronze, poised on its pedestal, it shows how far he had come in expressive power from the simple grace of his early fountain figures. The observer who walks around this bronze sees a continuously changing, merging series of views, the work maintaining its vigor and meaning throughout. This is not a one- or four-sided composition but a kinetic, continuously unfolding design.&#13;
&#13;
Molly Barth copy:&#13;
	Down below, on this pedestal is The Victory Eagle.  This is a bronze cast of the quarter-scale model of the Eagle that was made for the University of Michigan.  The talons are grasping a wreath.  That is for strength and victory.  This is a World War II memorial.  It is right outside the University of Michigan football stadium.  &#13;
	If you compare this eagle with the eagle between John F. Kennedy and the Spirit of Detroit head, you can see how the styles are different.  The American Eagle is very geometric and angular, while the University of Michigan Eagle is more naturalistic.  They're both so alive.  As you walk around the Victory Eagle his tremendous energy is apparent from many different views.  For sculpture in the round to be successful, it generally must "work" from more than one viewpoint.  The University of Michigan Eagle is a good example of sculpture which presents good views from multiple angles.    &#13;
&#13;
Facts:&#13;
-original bronze is 12 feet in size</text>
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&#13;
Gift of Walter E. Walpole Family&#13;
1991.022&#13;
&#13;
The University of Michigan commissioned Fredericks to create a memorial in honor of "The men and women of the University" who died in World War II. The bronze sculpture, four times the size of this model, stands outside The University of Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan.  Fredericks' explains the sculpture:&#13;
&#13;
"In designing the stadium memorial, I tried primarily to convey two thoughts: first, the monumental American eagle in its attitude of alertness and strength, grasping the laurel wreath in its talons, symbolizes the eternal, unceasing protection of the honored memory of those who gave their lives for our country; secondly, through the powerful, dynamic forms and outline, I attempted to represent the strength, courage and vitality of the young men and women to whom it is dedicated."&#13;
&#13;
The gift of a laurel wreath usually is representative of honor after a battle.</text>
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