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State Pride by Leo Friedlander
Photo CreditGSA\Julie Redwine
State Pride
Photo CreditGSA\Julie Redwine

State Pride

Year1952
Classification model
Medium plaster
Dimensions77 × 113 in. (195.6 × 287 cm)
Credits Fine Arts Collection
U.S. General Services Administration
  • This plaster panel is one of two that are installed at either end of the building's sixth-floor corridor. These panels are the full-scale models for a pair of never-completed granite reliefs that artist Leo Friedlander designed in 1950 to flank the entrance of the Estes Kefauver Federal Building & Courthouse Annex at 801 Broadway in Nashville. The plaster panels were rediscovered in 1989, professionally restored in 2002, and installed in the new U.S. Courthouse in 2021.

    This panel, inscribed with the title State Pride, illustrates important industries of Tennessee, with a factory on the left and a hydroelectric dam on the right. In the companion panel at the opposite end of the corridor, an allegorical figure of Justice presides over an idyllic landscape, with the dome of the U.S. Capitol visible in the distance.

    Friedlander was an accomplished artist. He studied at fine arts academies in Brussels, Paris, and Rome before becoming a professor of sculpture at New York University. Friedlander completed many public commissions, including reliefs representing Radio and Television (1939) at Rockefeller Center in New York City and two colossal bronze sculptures titled Valor and Sacrifice (1951) for Arlington Memorial Bridge in Washington, D.C.