Quarter scale plaster model of "Henry Ford"

Dublin Core

Title

Quarter scale plaster model of "Henry Ford"

Subject

Figure sculpture, American--20th century.
Ford, Henry, 1863-1947.
Fredericks, Marshall M., 1908-1998

Description

The Ford Empire relief was located in the Ford Auditorium constructed on the Detroit riverfront as the new home of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra during 1955-1956. Perhaps the most notable feature of the building's interior was the expansive, curvilinear lobby adorned with some of Marshall Fredericks' most delicate and refined sculptures.

A 145-feet long filigreed metal mural, The Ford Empire, swept almost the entire length of the curved outer wall. On the balcony walls at either end of the foyer stood polished metal theatrical groupings of circus performers, musicians, harlequins, and dancers. Formed from literally thousands of pieces of copper, nickel, brass, stainless steel, and aluminum and plated with gold, zinc, and cadmium these pieces were hand-shaped, joined, plated, and polished.

Creator

Richard Clapp Photographic

Source

Marshall M. Fredericks Papers
Series V, Box 12 Folder 1

Date

n.d.

Rights

Use of this image requires permission from the creator.

Relation

V-12-01

Format

image/jpeg

Type

Image

Identifier

5928-1

Still Image Item Type Metadata

Original Format

Black and white print

Physical Dimensions

6" x 10"

Files

Item #1712.jpg

Citation

Richard Clapp Photographic, “Quarter scale plaster model of "Henry Ford",” Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum, accessed November 24, 2024, https://omeka.svsu.edu/items/show/1712.