333 North Michigan Avenue Reliefs - Chicago, IL
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member adgorn
N 41° 53.274 W 087° 37.462
16T E 448200 N 4637518
A band of seven intaglio relief Indiana limestone panels, each seven feet high, on the fifth floor illustrate episodes in the history of Chicago. They were sculpted by Fred Torrey.
Waymark Code: WM8R91
Location: Illinois, United States
Date Posted: 05/06/2010
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member silverquill
Views: 3

333 N. Michigan Ave. is the first Chicago skyscraper done in the Art Deco style, located near the former site of Chicago's Ft. Dearborn, at the mouth of the Chicago River.

Another example of the benefits of LOOKING UP while you wander downtown Chicago! Interestingly, these panels receive slightly different names and orders from the two main Chicago sculpture source books by Riedy and Bach. (Apparently the reliefs were not named formally, so these sources created their own names. Also, they both err in the L to R order of the three small center panels. My summary below combines and corrects these sources.)

Consolidated from Bach & Gray “Chicago’s Public Sculpture, Riedy “Chicago Sculpture” and Early Chicago
(visit link)
The subjects, from left to right, are:
1) The Portage, which shows the Jesuit missionary and explorer Father Jacques Marquette portaging with and Indian and a voyageur;
2) The Covered Wagon Era, showing settlers with an oxen team;
3) The Hunter (aka Trapper), 4) The Vanishing Indian and 5) The Pioneer Woman, depicted in the three small central panels;
6) The Attack on Fort Dearborn (aka Ft. Dearborn Episode), showing soldiers defending the Fort (perhaps one with a bad headache); and
7) The Traders (aka Peaceful Pacification of the Indians), exchanging with an Indian.
The panels are in detailed in very low relief, and the silhouettes have been outlined by V-sunk cuts which give the appearance of line drawings. (Six of the panels are repeated on the building's north side and two of the panels are repeated on the building's east side.)

Sculptor Fred Torrey studied with two Chicago sculptors Charles Mulligan and Lorado Taft and was one of the associated sculptors at Taft’s Midway Studios.

Building info from (visit link)
"Based on Eliel Saarinen's influential entry in the 1922 competition for the design of Tribune Tower (he came in second), 333 N. Michigan was one of the distinctive skyscrapers built in Chicago during the late 20s and early 30s (1928) by architects Holabird & Root. These buildings are marked by their forceful verticality--achieved through successive setbacks, strongly articulated vertical piers, and long, vertical bands of windows. Building planes are flat, and smoothly finished materials are used extensively. The polished marble base and stylized bands of ornament are the only embellishments on this elegant limestone tower. This long, narrow, slablike building rises 24 stories and has a tower that rises to 35 stories at the northern end. Cornices are never used. Vertical bands of windows appear on the three sides of the northern tower."

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Date Sculpture was opened for vewing?: 01/01/1928

Website for sculpture?: [Web Link]

Where is this sculpture?:
333 N. Michigan Ave.
Chicago, IL USA


Sculptors Name: Fred Torrey

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