Browse Items (31 total)

Item #72a.jpg
6' x 3' 4" plaster scale model of "American Eagle (Victory Eagle)" for the John Weld Peck Federal Building in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Item #7839.jpg
This 21-foot high relief is located above the entrance of the John Weld Peck Federal Building in Cincinnati, Ohio. The eagle is cast in aluminum and the 13 gold anodized stars surrounding it represent the 13 original colonies of the United…

Item #70.jpg
Side view of plaster model of "American Eagle (Victory Eagle)" for John Weld Peck Federal Building in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Item #7840.jpg
This 21-foot high relief is located above the entrance of the John Weld Peck Federal Building in Cincinnati, Ohio. The eagle is cast in aluminum and the 13 gold anodized stars surrounding it represent the 13 original colonies of the United…

1991.067.jpg
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.
The American Eagle was created for the John Weld Peck Federal Building in Cincinnati,…

1994.047.jpg
American Eagle, 1975
broach
Silver

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall M. Fredericks
1994.047

1994.069.jpg
Model for 21 foot sculpture on the John Weld Peck Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. This aluminum eagle mounted on wood, has wings spread and holds in his talons stalks of wheat in one talon and arrows in the other.

Armatures and maquettes for sculptures on display 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,…

Full-scale plaster model for Flying Gulls Fountain 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,…

Item #4117.jpg
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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