Landmark visit in Michigan

The Cranbrook Foundation grounds, created in the early 1900s by the newspaper man George G. Booth, home to the Cranbrook Academy.  

  • In front of the Carl Milles Sculpture, the Orpheus Fountain at the Cranbrook Academy. L-R: Bruce D. Peterson, chairman of the board, Cranbrook Academy; Andreas Ershammar, Swedish Embassy Counselor; Dominic DiMarco, president of Cranbrook Educational Community and Academy of Art; Bjorn Lyrvall, Swedish Ambassador to the U.S.; Christopher Scoates, director of the Cranbrook Academy; Greg Wittkopp, director of the art Museum; Lennart Johansson, Swedish Consul in Michigan.
  • After visits with the local Swedish companies ABB Robotics, Autoliv and Atlas Copco, and a whirlwind tour of the Detroit area, Sweden’s ambassador Björn Lyrvall visited the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Swedish sculptor Carl Milles was sculptor in residence and teacher here for 20 years, up until his return to Sweden in 1951. The Cranbrook Foundation grounds, created in the early 1900s by the newspaper man George G. Booth, are home to 64 sculptures by the world-renowned Swedish sculptor.
    Cranbrook, which has been called “the most enchanted and enchanting setting in America” by an architecture critic at the Washington Post, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1989.
    For more information, see www.cranbrook.edu