Browse Items (8302 total)

1998_001_VIII_330.jpg
Graphite on tracing paper
22.5" x 11.5"

The Henry J. McMorran Auditorium in Port Huron, Michigan commissioned the Night and Day Fountain as well as a gold anodized aluminum Sculptured Clock for the building. Completed two years before the…

1998_001_VIII_331.jpg
Graphite on tracing paper
19.75" x 11"

The Henry J. McMorran Auditorium in Port Huron, Michigan commissioned the Night and Day Fountain as well as a gold anodized aluminum Sculptured Clock for the building. Completed two years before the…

1998_001_VIII_344.jpg
Graphite on tracing paper
31.25" x 15"

The Henry J. McMorran Auditorium in Port Huron, Michigan commissioned the Night and Day Fountain as well as a gold anodized aluminum Sculptured Clock for the building. Completed two years before the…

1998_001_VIII_165.jpg
Graphite on paper in mat
28" x 24"

This fountain celebrates the nation's first exploration of outer space. According to Fredericks, the sculpture "represents this age of great interest, exploration and discovery in outer space...[and] the…

1998_001_VIII_405.jpg
Graphite on paper
12" x 18"

Shop drawing for Cross at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church in Farmington, Michigan.

Item #421.jpg
"The Boy and Bear" at Northland Shopping Center in Southfield, Michigan. Designed by Victor Gruen, Northland is one of the world's first shopping centers.

Limestone and gilt bronze, 8 1/2 feet.

1991.129b.jpg
The compact, monolithic form of the Siberian Ram contrasts with the more open composition of the Leaping Gazelle (#16), although both have spherical contours and strong curvilinear design elements. Both are evocative. Some viewers perceive them as…

1991.053.jpg
Siberian Ram, 1941
Plaster, 1987

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks
1991.053

Fredericks first made Siberian Ram in 1941, but the first documented bronze cast was not installed until 1966, when a 24-inch tall sculpture was placed in…

2000.709.jpg
Limestone Siberian Ram. Surface is smooth. Rubber mold was made from this sculpture to create later bronzes, specifically for the Museum in 1987.

1991.145.jpg
The compact, monolithic form of the Siberian Ram contrasts with the more open composition of the Leaping Gazelle (#16), although both have spherical contours and strong curvilinear design elements. Both are evocative. Some viewers perceive them as…
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