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Philosophy
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Wright, Frank Lloyd
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Early life.
The
early Chicago years.
Europe
and Japan.
The
'20s and '30s.
International
success and acclaim.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
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Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium,
designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1958 (completed 1964), Arizona State University,
Tempe, Ariz. |
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Wright, Frank Lloyd, original name FRANK LINCOLN WRIGHT (b.
June 8, 1867, Richland Center, Wis., U.S.--d. April 9, 1959, Phoenix, Ariz.),
architect and writer, the most abundantly creative genius of American
architecture. His "Prairie style" became the basis of 20th-century
residential design in the United States. (see also architecture) |
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Wright's mother, Anna Lloyd-Jones, was a
schoolteacher, aged 24, when she married a widower, William C. Wright, an
itinerant 41-year-old musician and preacher. The Wrights moved with their infant
son, Frank Lincoln (he would later change his middle name to Lloyd), to Iowa in
1869 and then lived successively in Rhode Island and Weymouth, Mass., before
eventually moving back to Wright's mother's home state of Wisconsin. The young
Wright attended the University of Wisconsin at Madison for a few terms in
1885-86 as a special student, but as there was no instruction in architecture,
he took engineering courses. In order to supplement the family income, Wright
worked for the dean of engineering, but he did not like his situation nor the
commonplace architecture around him. He dreamed of Chicago, where great
buildings of unprecedented structural ingenuity were rising. |
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Wright left Madison early in 1887 for
Chicago, where he found employment with J.L. Silsbee, doing architectural
detailing. Silsbee, a magnificent sketcher, inspired Wright to achieve a mastery
of ductile line and telling accent. In time Wright found more rewarding work in
the important architectural firm of Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan. Wright
soon became chief assistant to Sullivan, and in
June 1889 he married Catherine Tobin. He worked under Sullivan until 1893, at
which time he opened his own architectural practice. His family grew to six
children, while his firm grew until as many as 10 assistants were employed. |
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The first work from the new office, a
house for W.H. Winslow, was sensational and skillful enough to attract the
attention of the most influential architect in Chicago, Daniel
Burnham, who offered to subsidize Wright for several years if Wright
would study in Europe to become the principal designer in Burnham's firm. It was
a solid compliment, but Wright refused, and this difficult decision strengthened
his determination to search for a new and appropriate Midwestern architecture. |
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Other young architects were searching in
the same way; this trend became known as the "Prairie
school" of architecture. By 1900 Prairie architecture was mature,
and Frank Lloyd Wright, 33 years old and mainly self-taught, was its chief
practitioner. The Prairie school was soon widely recognized for its radical
approach to building modern homes. Utilizing mass-produced materials and
equipment, mostly developed for commercial buildings, the Prairie architects
discarded elaborate compartmentalization and detailing for bold, plain walls,
roomy family living areas, and perimeter heating below broad glazed areas.
Comfort, convenience, and spaciousness were economically achieved. Wright alone
built about 50 Prairie houses from 1900 to 1910. The typical Wright-designed
residence from this period displayed a wide, low roof over continuous window
bands that turned corners, defying the conventional boxlike structure of most
houses, and the house's main rooms flowed together in an uninterrupted space. |
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During this period Wright lectured
repeatedly; his most famous talk, "The Art and Craft of the Machine,"
was first printed in 1901. His works were featured in local exhibitions from
1894 through 1902. In that year he built the home of the W.W. Willitses, the
first masterwork of the Prairie school. In 1905 he traveled to Japan. |
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By now Wright's practice encompassed
apartment houses, group dwellings, and recreation centres. Most remarkable were
his works for business and church. The administrative block for the Larkin
Company, a mail order firm in Buffalo, N.Y., was erected in 1904
(demolished in 1950). Abutting the railways, it was sealed and fireproof, with
filtered, conditioned, mechanical ventilation; metal desks, chairs, and files;
ample sound-absorbent surfaces; and excellently balanced light, both natural and
artificial. Two years later the Unitarian church of Oak Park, Unity Temple, was
under way; in 1971 it was registered as a national historic landmark. Built on a
minimal budget, the small house of worship and attached social centre achieved
timeless monumentality. The congregation still meets in the building's intimate,
top-lit cube of space, which is turned inward, away from city noises. The Unity
Temple improved on the Larkin Building in the consistency of its structure (it
was built of concrete, with massive walls and reinforced roof) and in the
ingenious interior ornament that emphasized space while subordinating mass.
Unlike many contemporary architects, Wright took advantage of ornament to define
scale and accentuation. |
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By 1909 Wright's estrangement from his
wife and his relationship with Mamah Cheney, the wife of one of his former
clients, were damaging his ability to obtain architectural commissions. In that
year Wright began work on his own house near Spring Green, Wis., which he named
Taliesin, before he left for Europe that September. Abroad, Wright set to work
on two books, both first published in Germany, which became famous; a grand
double portfolio of his drawings (Ausgeführte
Bauten und Entwürfe, 1910) and a smaller but full photographic record
of his buildings (Ausgeführte Bauten,
1911). With a draftsman, Taylor Willey, and his eldest son, Lloyd Wright, the
architect produced the numerous beautiful drawings published in these portfolios
by reworking renderings brought from Chicago, Oak Park, and Wisconsin. |
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By 1911 Wright and Cheney, still
unmarried since Wright could not get a divorce, were living at Taliesin.
Wright's career suffered from unfavourable publicity generated by his
relationship with Cheney, but he found a few loyal clients like the Avery
Coonleys, whose suburban estate, west of Chicago, the grand masterwork of the
Prairie style, he had designed in 1908. In 1912 Wright designed his first
skyscraper, a slender concrete slab, prophetic but unbuilt. (see also Index: Taliesin and Taliesin West) |
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At this time the Japanese began to
consider Wright as architect for a new Tokyo hotel where visitors could be
officially entertained and housed in Western style. Thus, early in 1913 he and
Cheney spent some months in Japan. The following year Wright was occupied in
Chicago with the rushed construction of Midway Gardens, a complex planned to
include open-air dining, other restaurants, and clubs. Symmetrical in plan, this
building was sparklingly decorated with abstract and near-abstract art and
ornament. Its initial success was cut short by Prohibition, however, and it was
later demolished. Just before Midway Gardens opened, Wright was dealt a crushing
blow; Cheney and her children, who were visiting her at Taliesin, and four
others were killed by an insane houseman, and the living quarters of the house
were devastated by fire. |
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Stunned by the tragedy, Wright began to
rebuild his home and was soon joined by a sculptress named Miriam Noel who
became his mistress, although Wright was still married to Catherine Wright. In
1916 they went to Japan, which was to be their home for five years. |
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The Imperial
Hotel (1915-22, dismantled 1967) in Tokyo was one of Wright's most
significant works in its lavish comfort, splendid spaces, and unprecedented
construction. Because of its revolutionary, floating cantilever construction, it
was one of the only large buildings that safely withstood the devastating
earthquake which struck Tokyo in 1923. No one still doubted Wright's complete
mastery of his art, but he continued to experience difficulty in acquiring major
commissions because of his egocentric and unconventional behaviour and the
scandals that surrounded his private life. |
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Wright's transpacific journeys took him
to California, where he met a wealthy, demanding client, Aline Barnsdall, who,
around 1920, built to Wright's designs a complex of houses and studios amid
gardens on an estate called Olive Hill; these now serve as the Municipal Art
Gallery in Hollywood. In 1923 and 1924 Wright built four houses in California,
using textured concrete blocks with a fresh sense of form. |
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Late in 1922 Catherine divorced Wright
at last. His relationship with Miriam Noel ended, and in 1925 Taliesin again
burned, struck by lightning, and again Wright rebuilt it. That same year a Dutch
publication, Wendingen, presented
Wright's newer work fully and handsomely, with praise from Europeans. In 1924
Wright had met Olgivanna Hinzenberg; soon she came to live with Wright
permanently, and they married in 1928. Meanwhile, Wright's finances had fallen
into a catastrophic state; in 1926-27 he sold a great collection of Japanese
prints but could not rescue Taliesin from the bank that seized it. Amid these
debacles, Wright began to write An
Autobiography, as well as a series of articles on architecture, which
appeared in 1927 and 1928. Finally, some of Wright's admirers set up Wright,
Incorporated--a firm that owned his talents, his properties, and his debts--that
effectively shielded him. In 1929 Wright designed a tower of studios
cantilevered from a concrete core, to be built in New York City; in various
permutations it appeared as one of his best concepts. (In 1956 the St. Mark's
Tower project was finally realized as the Price Tower
in Bartlesville, Okla.) |
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The stock market crash of 1929 ended all
architectural activity in the United States, and Wright spent the next years
lecturing at Princeton, Chicago, and New York City. Meanwhile an exhibition of
his architecture toured Europe and the United States. In 1932 An
Autobiography and the first of Wright's books on urban problems, The
Disappearing City, were published. In the same year the Wrights opened the
Taliesin Fellowship, a training program for architects and related artists who
lived in and operated Taliesin, its buildings, and further school structures as
they built or remodeled them. From 20 to 60 apprentices worked with Wright each
year; a few remained for decades, constituting his main office staff. In the
winter Wright and his entourage packed up and drove to Arizona, where Taliesin
West was soon to be built. At this time Wright developed an effective system for
constructing low-cost homes and, over the years, many were built. Unlike the
Prairie houses these "Usonians" were flat roofed, usually of one floor
placed on a heated concrete foundation mat; among them were some of Wright's
best works--e.g., the Jacobs house
(1937) in Westmorland, Wis., near Madison, and the Winckler-Goetsch house (1939)
at Okemos, Mich. |
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Wright gradually reemerged as a leading
architect; when the national economy improved, two commissions came to him that
he utilized magnificently. The first was for a weekend retreat near Pittsburgh
in the Allegheny mountains. This residence, "Fallingwater,"
was cantilevered over a waterfall with a simple daring that evoked wide
publicity from 1936 to the present. Probably Wright's most-admired work, it was
later given to the state and was opened to visitors. The second important
commission was the administrative centre for S.C.
Johnson, wax manufacturers, at Racine, Wis. Here Wright combined a
closed, top-lit space with recurving forms and novel, tubular mushroom columns.
The resulting airy enclosure is one of the most humane workrooms in modern
architecture. Each of these buildings showed Wright to be as innovative as
younger designers and a master of unique expressive forms. |
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Thereafter commissions flowed to Wright
for every kind of building and from many parts of the world. His designs for the
campus and buildings of Florida Southern College at Lakeland (1940-49) were
begun, and the V.C. Morris Shop (1948) in San Francisco was executed. Among
Wright's many late designs, executed and unexecuted, two major works stand out:
the Guggenheim Museum in New York City and the
Marin County government centre near San Francisco. The Guggenheim Museum was
commissioned as early as 1943 to house a permanent collection of abstract art.
Construction began in 1956, and the museum opened in 1959 after Wright's death.
The Guggenheim, which has no separate floor levels but instead uses a spiral
ramp, realized Wright's ideal of a continuous space and is one of his most
significant buildings. The Marin County complex is Wright's only executed work
for government, and the only one that integrates architecture, highway, and
automobile, a concept that had long preoccupied Wright. |
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A prolific author, Wright wrote An
Autobiography (published 1932, revised 1943), An
Organic Architecture (1939), An
American Architecture (1955), and A
Testament (1957). |
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Wright was a great originator and a
highly productive architect. He designed some 800 buildings, of which 380 were
actually built and about 280 are still standing. Throughout his career he
retained the use of ornamental detail, earthy colours, and rich textural
effects. His sensitive use of materials helped to control and perfect his
dynamic expression of space, which opened a new era in American architecture. He
became famous as the creator and expounder of "organic architecture,"
his phrase indicating buildings that harmonize both with their inhabitants and
with their environment. The boldness and fertility of his invention and his
command of space are probably his greatest achievements. |
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(E.K./Ed.) |
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A reliable biography is Robert C.
Twombly, Frank Lloyd Wright: His Life and
His Architecture (1979). Robert L. Sweeney, Frank
Lloyd Wright: An Annotated Bibliography (1978), contains more than 2,000
books, periodical articles, reviews, catalogs, and other items by and about
Wright and covers the years 1886-1977. A classic study of Wright's work is
Henry-Russell Hitchcock, In the Nature of
Materials, 1887-1941: The Buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright (1942, reprinted
1975). Other valuable works include Grant Carpenter Manson, Frank
Lloyd Wright to 1910: The First Golden Age (1958, reissued 1979); Vincent
Scully, Frank Lloyd Wright (1960); Arthur Drexler, The Drawings of Frank Lloyd Wright (1962); Olgivanna Lloyd Wright, Frank
Lloyd Wright: His Life, His Work, His Words (1966), containing a full but
occasionally inaccurate listing of Wright's buildings after 1941; and Thomas A.
Heinz, Frank Lloyd Wright (1982). |
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