Monument to Joe Louis

Memorial in Detroit, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Monument to Joe Louis, known also as The Fist,[1] is a memorial dedicated to boxer Joe Louis located at the intersection of Jefferson Avenue and Woodward Avenue in Detroit, near Hart Plaza.[2] The sculpture is one of two monuments in Detroit honoring Joe Louis.[3][4]

Year
  • 1986
TypeSculpture
Medium
  • Bronze
Quick facts Artist, Year ...
Monument to Joe Louis
The Fist
The sculpture in 2019
ArtistRobert Graham (sculptor)
Year
  • 1986
TypeSculpture
Medium
  • Bronze
Dimensions7.3 m × 3.5 m × 7.3 m (24 ft × 11.5 ft × 24 ft)
Weight
  • 5000 lbs. fist alone
  • 8000 lbs. total including framework
LocationDetroit, Michigan, United States
Coordinates42°19′43″N 83°02′40″W
OwnerDetroit Institute of Arts
Websitehttps://www.dia.org/art/collection/object/monument-joe-louis-46291
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History

Showing title of piece

Dedicated on October 16, 1986, the sculpture, commissioned by Sports Illustrated from the Mexican-American sculptor Robert Graham (1938–2008), and poured by the legendary bronze artist, Rolf Kriken, is a 24-foot-long (7.3 m) arm with a fisted hand suspended by a 24-foot-high (7.3 m) pyramidal framework.[5][2] The sculpture weighs 5000 pounds and the total weight including the framework is 8000 pounds.[6][7]

The inscription on the back of the arm reads:

MONUMENT
TO
JOE LOUIS
BY
ROBERT GRAHAM


A GIFT FROM SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
TO THE PEOPLE OF THE CITY OF
DETROIT. THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF
ARTS AND ITS FOUNDERS SOCIETY
ON THE OCCASION OF THE MUSEUM'S
CENTENNIAL. 1885-1985.

It represents the power of his punch both inside and outside the ring. Because of Louis' efforts to fight Jim Crow laws, the fist was symbolically intended as a statement against racism.[8] Graham referred to the sculpture as a "battering ram".[9] It is claimed to be an historical metaphor, even down to its placement (pointing toward Canada).[10]

The sculpture was vandalized by two white men in 2004, who covered it in white paint and left a sign which read, "Courtesy of Fighting Whities".[9] Graham responded that the piece was "working" if it aroused passion.[9]

The sculpture is one of two monuments in Detroit honoring Joe Louis. The other is a full-size statue of Louis located inside the Huntington Place convention center.

  • The monument is featured briefly in the 1998 film, Out of Sight.
  • In 2013, Detroit-based artist Jerry Vile placed a 4-ft. tall can of Crisco in front of the monument[11] with a statement indicating it was for "helping to ease the pain of Detroit's bankruptcy."[12] Many interpreted the can as a reference to fisting,[13] a sex act in which Crisco is sometimes used as lubricant.[14]
  • The statue is featured prominently in the opening sequences of the 2018 video game, Detroit: Become Human.

References

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