Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Reliefs by Henry Hering on the Federal Reserve Bank Building

Eagle by Henry Hering

This building, put up in 1930–1931, was a branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, and the Clevelanders Walker & Weeks were the architects—but with Henry Hornbostel and Eric Fisher Wood as “consulting architects.”1 Old Pa Pitt doesn’t know exactly how far the consulting went. At any rate, the architects chose sculptor Henry Hering, who had done several prominent decorations in Cleveland, to create the cast-aluminum reliefs for this building. The picture below is from 2015, but it will serve to show the placement of the reliefs:

Federal Reserve Bank Building

The three main figures are obviously allegorical; they seem to represent industry, agriculture, and the professions.

Relief by Henry Hering
Relief
Relief
Decoration in aluminum
  1. Source: Walter Kidney, Henry Hornbostel: An Architect’s Master Touch, where this building is no. 137 in the List of Works. ↩︎

See a random picture
and become a better person

You could buy this book
if you wanted a book.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *