Marshall Fredericks's Detroit sculptures capture the spirit of the Motor
City and its dramatic transformation from the 1950s to the present day.
In this book, Janna Jones analyzes eight of these enormous works of
public art, situating them and their structures in metro Detroit's
distinctive midcentury milieu and bringing much-needed critical
attention to this sculptor's oeuvre. Sadly, some of these artworks have
suffered along with the city as it shrank from its postwar zenith. Both
the buildings and the sculptures erected for them deserve to be rescued
from neglect, and then maintained and preserved for the future.