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sigue2000
17-08-2005, 18:37
Frank Lloyd Wright was born in Richland Center, Wisconsin, on June 8, 1867, and died in Phoenix, Arizona, on April 9, 1959, at the age of 91. (He often gave his birthdate as 1869, but records indicate that he was actually born in 1867.)

His father was William Cary Wright, a preacher and a musician. His mother was Anna Lloyd Jones, a teacher whose large Welsh family settled the valley area near Spring Green, Wisconsin, where Wright later built his home, Taliesin.

Wright had two sisters, Jane (b.1869) and Maginel (b.1877).

His family life was nomadic and unsettled in the early years. Before arriving in Madison in 1878, Wright lived in Rhode Island, Iowa, and Massachusetts, in addition to Wisconsin.

In Madison, Wright's father was a pastor of the Unitarian Church. Wright lived in Madison from about age 11 until about age 20. At age 11 Wright also began spending summers with his uncle James Lloyd Jones on his farm located near the Taliesin hill.

Those early years in the Wisconsin countryside had a profound effect on Wright: "As a boy," he wrote in his autobiography, "I learned to know the ground plan of the region in every line and feature. For me now its elevation is the modeling of the hills, the weaving and fabric that clings to them, the look of it all in tender green or covered with snow or in full glow of summer that bursts into the glorious blaze of autumn. I still feel myself as much a part of it as the trees and birds and bees are, and the red barns." Wright's father and mother divorced in 1885 and Wright never saw his father again.

To help support the family, Wright worked for Allan Conover, a Dean of the University of Wisconsin's department of Engineering. Wright spent two semesters studying civil engineering at the University of Wisconsin and also assisted architect Joseph Lyman Silsbee draft and supervise the construction of Unity Chapel (the Lloyd Jones family chapel still standing near Taliesin.)Frank Lloyd Wright spent more than 70 years creating designs that revolutionized the art and architecture of this century. Many innovations in today's buildings are products of his imagination.

In all he designed 1141 works - including houses, offices, churches, schools, libraries, bridges, museums and many other building types. Of that total, 532 resulted in completed works, 409 of which still stand.

However, Wright's creative mind was not confined to architecture. He also designed furniture, fabrics, art glass, lamps, dinnerware, silver, linens and graphic arts. In addition, he was a prolific writer, an educator and a philosopher.

He authored twenty books and countless articles, lectured throughout the United States and in Europe, and developed a remarkable plan for decentralizing urban America (Broadacre City) that continues to be debated by scholars and writers to this day -- some 60 years after its conception.

Wright is considered by most authorities to be the 20th century's greatest architect. Indeed, the American Institute of Architects in a recent national survey, recognized Frank Lloyd Wright to be "the greatest American architect of all time." Architectural Record magazine (the official magazine of the American Institute of Architects) declared that Wright's buildings stand out among the most significant architectural works during the last 100 years in the world.

To get a perspective on Wright's long and productive life, it is useful to remember that he was born in 1867, just two years after the end of the Civil War and died in 1959, two years after the launching of the first satellite Sputnik. Wright's Spring Green home, Taliesin, built in 1911, was initially lighted by gas lamps.

A Reverance for Democracy and Nature
Wright revered the American experience and believed that democracy was the best form of government. Throughout his life he strived to create a new architecture that reflected the American democratic experience, an architecture based not on failing European and foreign models (such as Greek, Egyptian and Renaissance styles) but rather an architecture based solely on America's democratic values and human dignity. He often referred to the United States as Usonia. The city plan, Broadacre City, was the culmination of Wright's ideas on a new architecture for a new democracy.

Wright preached the beauty of native materials and insisted that buildings grow naturally from their surroundings. He freed Americans from the Victorian "boxes" of the 19th century and helped create the open plan with rooms that flowed and opened out to each other.

By changing architecture and changing the way America lived, Wright may have had an even more profound effect. As Wright said, "Whether people are fully conscious of this or not, they actually derive countenance and sustenance from the 'atmosphere' of the things they live in or with. They are rooted in them just as a plant is in the soil in which it is planted."

The soil that sprouted Frank Lloyd Wright was the rural Wisconsin countryside. Throughout his life Wright spoke of the influence of nature on his work and attributed his love of nature to those early years in the rural Wisconsin countryside. During summers spent on his uncle's farm he learned to look at the patterns and rhythms found in nature - the branch of a tree (a natural cantilever), outcroppings of limestone, and the ever-changing sandbars.

Wright later advised his apprentices to "study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you." The influence of nature is apparent in his work. From the earth-hugging "Prairie" houses such as the 1909 Robie House in Illinois and Taliesin in Wisconsin, to the cascading cantilevers of the 1936 Fallingwater in Pennsylvania (considered to be the most famous house ever designed for non-royalty), from the sky-lighted forest of concrete columns of the 1936 Johnson Wax Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin, the rugged beauty of Taliesin West in Arizona, to the spiraling, "snail-like" Guggenheim Museum completed in 1959 in New York City, his work shows a command of nature and native materials and an instinctive understanding of social and human needs.

No other architect so intuitively designed to human scale. No other architecture took greater advantage of setting and environment. No other architect glorified the sense of "shelter" as did Frank Lloyd Wright. "A building is not just a place to be. It is a way to be," he said.

A Timeless Contribution
Wright's work has stood the test of time. His buildings are still relevant to today's values. People have moved and found new jobs just to own a Wright house. Grass-roots efforts have developed to preserve his work. In 1970, there were only two Wright homes open to the public. Today there are more than twenty, which together attract more than one million visitors a year. More than one-third of Wright buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places or are in a National Historic District.

Photo by Peter Beers

sigue2000
17-08-2005, 18:41
:not worth Peter Beers runs a site devoted to the buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright. There are masses of personal photographs of exterior and interior. The buildings are sorted by state and often visited more than once :craqueur: FLW Roadtrip (http://www.peterbeers.net/interests/flw_rt/flw_roadtrip.htm)

More information on Wright (http://www.franklloydwrightinfo.com/)
And the All-Wright-Site (http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/1469/flwbuild.html)

jake
17-08-2005, 22:10
I love most of Wrights stuff. Every year we would go to Wright Plus http://www.wrightplus.org/wrightplus/wrightplus.html in Oak Park, Illinois, the location of his home and studio. Wright Plus was an annual a tour of about 10-12 Wright homes. Some were great examples of his Prairie Style, others his bootleg stuff done while he was sneaking around Sullivan's back. After about ten years these became the only homes on the tour, so the tour sort of died out.

I will say the best restored Wright home that I have been in is the Meyer May house in Grand Rapids, Michigan. This was restored by Steelcase in 1987. This house was built in 1908.

I just saw one of his Usonian Houses in Cincinnati last week. Great stuff.

http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/boulter/

sigue2000
17-08-2005, 23:45
I will say the best restored Wright home that I have been in is the Meyer May house in Grand Rapids, Michigan. This was restored by Steelcase in 1987. This house was built in 1908.
Another of Peter Beers great pics

jake
18-08-2005, 04:35
This is not a good photo of this house. The interior detailing is a thing of beauty right down to the brass caps on the central vacuum.

cobberman
18-08-2005, 04:45
What I most appreciate about FLLW work's is their timelessness.

jake
18-08-2005, 04:47
The Meyer May house has the nice gold foil in all the horizontals of the fireplace. Pretty cool detail.

sigue2000
18-08-2005, 09:52
The Meyer May house has the nice gold foil in all the horizontals of the fireplace. Pretty cool detail.

Check out Peter Beers site to see what Jake's talking about.

Personally I love this sink. :craqueur: Hope to see it live and in colour one day.
Photo by P.B.

ilnomedellarosa
17-11-2005, 11:34
Beautiful photos :
http://www.bolender.com/Frank%20Lloyd%20Wright/Fallingwater/June%2030%202004%20visit%20to%20Fallingwater/June%2030%202004%20visit%20to%20Fallingwater.htm

Stides
17-11-2005, 14:50
Wright is a favorite of mine. I grew up 20 minutes from Fallingwater, and 15 from Kentuck Knob, a very nice Usonian. Went to Chicago earlier this year and saw his studio and several of his designs in the area.

Everyone has to make the trip to Fallingwater at least once.

Frenchy Pilou
17-11-2005, 15:30
... to rotate easily the vidéo above?
Because I must rotate my monitor for see and listen it in the good position :D

imasayer
17-11-2005, 16:24
:not worth Peter Beers runs a site devoted to the buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright. There are masses of personal photographs of exterior and interior. The buildings are sorted by state and often visited more than once :craqueur: FLW Roadtrip (http://www.peterbeers.net/interests/flw_rt/flw_roadtrip.htm)

More information on Wright (http://www.franklloydwrightinfo.com/)
And the All-Wright-Site (http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/1469/flwbuild.html)

Thanks so much, great site.

ilnomedellarosa
17-11-2005, 21:09
heheheheh, Frenchy
You don't must rotate your monitor , but tilt your head to the left by 90o! ;)

Brian T
17-11-2005, 21:40
there was actually a great series that ran on PBS here in the states a few years ago about the restoration of the Meyer-May and how they resoted some of the imterior Murals. It would be interesting to see if someone could dig that video up!

jake
17-11-2005, 21:50
Yes, nice mural. Have not seen the video, but I have seen the mural in person. I recall it was a hollyhock theme. Beautiful restoration from top to bottom.

Frenchy Pilou
17-11-2005, 22:23
...has given this SU File of the "Fallingwater" at PBB1 :cool:
I don't remember who :o

ilnomedellarosa
03-12-2005, 17:52
http://architecture.about.com/od/wrightwebsites/

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:39
Photos taken in 2001 of Fallingwater.

This one shows the arrival to the site from a small forest walk. You do not arrive to the most impressive view. The view you typically see from books is down another path and not obvious. You can see the entrance to the bridge that crosses the small river.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:41
From the bridge you see the river and the house.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:42
You can see the terrace and the stair leading down the river.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:46
Around the entrance.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:47
View of overhangs.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:48
Entrance canopy.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:49
Canopy detail.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:50
Canopy view.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:56
Terrace.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:57
Window detail.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:57
Stair detail.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 19:58
From the other side part the entrance. Not typical view.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 20:00
View inside. A group was visiting, but we did not make arrangement before, so we could not join them. I had to look in from outside.

franjayo
03-12-2005, 20:04
View from down the path, where most pictures are taken.

Frenchy Pilou
04-12-2005, 00:30
...for ever (http://www.pushpullbar.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1421) :)

gary in westOz
03-01-2006, 07:27
In July 1994, I got to stay for 2 weeks as guest at Taliesin west, Az, it was fantastic. Whilst I was there, the Sanfranciso University ran a masters in architecture class on organic architecture, guest speakers included Will Bruder, James Hubble, and Douglas Cardinal ( native indian Canadian architect) . I was invited to join in, so I got to tour some of the Wright buildings around the area ( Price house, Boomer house, Adelman house , Pfieffer house, Arizona Biltmore , How house)
I stayed in the guest room for a few nights, then in one of the apprentice's flats.

What striked me was how small everything thing was, particularly in height.

Besides a library and bookstore, they also have an archive ( large concrete air-conditioned vault), which I was allowed to have a look in. In there they kept all the historical drawings. letters etc
so I had a good look at some construction drawings. Besides all being pencil on paper ( i don't know how they did mulitiple copies of drawings in the 1930's), they differred to our modern ways of drawing.
Information everywhere, on only a few sheets per building;-, usually NO floor plans, but lots of framing plans (@ approx 1:50), a few important sections, and noted elevations ( @ 1:5/20)
I real eye opener in clearly indicating the important parts of a building for the tradesmen. I've ried to follow this format myself since then.

The main drafting room and living room are delightful well lighted spaces, but without airconditioning would un-sufferable it the Arizona heat.some pics.

gary in westOz
03-01-2006, 07:29
There was lots of art around the place, paintings, sculptures, architectural details;
here is the bell tower

gary in westOz
03-01-2006, 07:32
the Boomer house c1953
a very small residence full of surprises and sense of space.

imasayer
03-01-2006, 17:20
I will say the best restored Wright home that I have been in is the Meyer May house in Grand Rapids, Michigan. This was restored by Steelcase in 1987. This house was built in 1908.
http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/boulter/



Funny that you should mention that house, Jake. I just got back from Grand Rapids on Thursday. Got a chance to visit Meyer May house and I was blown away. It was my first FLW house. I will post it later tonight or tomorrow.

Update: Now posted here (http://www.pushpullbar.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1725&highlight=meyer).

SWANK-E
03-01-2006, 23:52
(Mods, would you like me to continue it in this thread or begin a new thread?)

new one please, and then provide the link here, thanks

jake
04-01-2006, 00:04
Funny that you should mention that house, Jake. I just got back from Grand Rapids on Thursday. Got a chance to visit Meyer May house and I was blown away. It was my first FLW house. I will post it later tonight or tomorrow. (Mods, would you like me to continue it in this thread or begin a new thread?)


Yea, the Meyer May house is a beauty. Restored to the nth degree!

jparchitectus
04-01-2006, 00:21
Great place - Look forward to seeing it posted -

BrianMyers
04-01-2006, 00:58
I grew up just 15 miles from Wright's Dana-Thomas house in Springfield, Illinois. To this day I'm torn on if I like it or not. The thought behind it and architectural details are just amazing, but the furniture is uncomfortable and the spaces are VERY dark. Not only are the windows small (actually, there are many large beautiful windows, but they let in little light... the pics shown here are at the brightest time of day) but the dark wood inside just sucks up the light.

Here are some good pictures in what they call a Virtual Tour. Just click on the room in the floor plan to see a picture.

http://www.dana-thomas.org/InforHouse.htm