Browse Items (106 total)

2000.836.jpg
Plaster model for Flying Wild Geese in parts. The base is broken and the Geese heads are not attached. The tips of the wings are broken off the geese.

2000.712.jpg
Plaster relief of Flying WIld Geese. Plaster is discolored from the releasing agent.

2000.711.jpg
Plaster relief of Flying Wild Geese medallion.

2000.145a.jpg
Original model for Freedom of the Human Spirit. This model is in several pieces. There are 3 geese, the male and female figures, 2 pieces to the spires and a small box that contains the braids of the female. The yellowish discoloring is from…

1999.229.jpg
Posthumously cast bronze with green patina of Flying wild Geese on a black marble base. Foundry and edition marks and A.P. stamped/ inscribed in wax; also, interior edition mark stamped in wax.

1999.172.jpg
Plaster relief mold for Flying Wild Geese. There is a series of bumps where the mold rims connect. A note attached to this says that the mold ends are with the Herbert Pedersen relief mold.

Full-scale bronze Flying Wild Geese in the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum.tif
Mrs. Dorothy (Honey) Arbury studied with Fredericks when she attended Kingswood School at the Cranbrook Educational Community in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in the 1930s. She met him through her uncle, Alden B. Dow, a prominent architect in Midland,…

View of full-scale bronze Flying Wild Geese in the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum.tif
Mrs. Dorothy (Honey) Arbury studied with Fredericks when she attended Kingswood School at the Cranbrook Educational Community in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in the 1930s. She met him through her uncle, Alden B. Dow, a prominent architect in Midland,…

Close-up of full-scale bronze Flying Wild Geese in the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum.tif
Mrs. Dorothy (Honey) Arbury studied with Fredericks when she attended Kingswood School at the Cranbrook Educational Community in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in the 1930s. She met him through her uncle, Alden B. Dow, a prominent architect in Midland,…

Side view of full-scale bronze Flying Wild Geese in the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum.tif
Mrs. Dorothy (Honey) Arbury studied with Fredericks when she attended Kingswood School at the Cranbrook Educational Community in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in the 1930s. She met him through her uncle, Alden B. Dow, a prominent architect in Midland,…
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