Posts Past And Random

Obama's Nominees and Environmentalism

Wednesday, 21 January 2009 | francis pruett

article thumbnail
+ Full Story

Saving sharks, one bowl at a time

Saturday, 03 October 2009 | Thinknovation

article thumbnailSaving sharks, one bowl at a time Fairmont Singapore Partners with ACRES in Fight to Save the Sharks As the battle to save sharks reaches new...
+ Full Story

More Thinknovation

Commented


Designed by:
SiteGround web hosting Joomla Templates
Frank Lloyd Wright PDF Print E-mail
Written by Linda Cawelti   
Friday, 28 November 2008 07:07

Frank Lloyd Wright is easily America's most influential Architect.

Frank Lloyd Wright

I
n his 91 years he managed to deconstruct the box, change the flow of the floor plan and the material we build with, and invent Organic Architecture.

Not bad for a kid from Richland Center, Wisconsin. Born in 1867, Wright was first influenced by the Wisconsin countryside, where he spent summers with his uncle.

As 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."

This understanding of the horizontal planes of the land and its organic nature infused much of Wright's lifework. Wright got his start in architecture in 1885, when his parents divorced and he spent two semesters working for Allan Conover, the Dean of Engineering at the University of Wisconsin to help support his family. He also drafted for architect Joseph Lyman Silsbee.

Frank Lloyd WrightIn 1887 he left Madison for Chicago where he worked for the firm of Adler and Sullivan for six years. Sullivan was one of the few influences Wright ever acknowledged, calling him his "Lieber Meister," or beloved master.

Sullivan was known for his integrated ornamentation based on natural themes, and he developed the now famous maxim "Form Follows Function."

This is what Wright would later develop into "Form and Function are One. " After leaving Sullivan, Wright began his own firm from his home outside Chicago, and his first masterpiece was The Winslow House built in 1893 in River Forest, Illinois.

The house clearly expressed Wright's style in architecture with its expansive and open features. Creating a natural link between building, man and his environment was Wright's goal, and he created a union between the client's needs and the natural environment of the site by building the structure out of materials found in the area.

The houses built during this early era came to be known as Prairie Houses and are characterized by expansive and open floor plans, long, low horizontal planes, low pitched roofs, deep overhangs and low linear windows that further emphasize the horizontal theme. Wood is stained and never painted to showcase its natural beauty. The "deconstruction of the box" begins with these first designs.

The corners of a box are brought inward and the roof plane extended, therefore elongating the horizontal plane and assuring the openness of the room. Less energy is trapped in the corner and a feeling of expansiveness overcomes the dweller.

In 1901, Wright delivered a famous talk entitled "The Art and Craft of the Machine" at the Hull House in Chicago. It was the first time an American architect embraced the machine and was widely acclaimed.

The European Arts and Crafts Movement had denounced the machine believing it was responsible for the decline in quality and craftsmanship in architecture.?But Wright urged the machine's use not to recreate ornate hand-made designs, but rather to bring out the beauty and simplicity of wood. This insistence on simplicity and the natural use of materials carries on today in the architecture of the Craftsman homes found in California and throughout the West Coast.

The feeling one has upon entering one of these homes is a feeling of openness; rather than the divided rooms of many homes, these rooms flow into one another. The ceilings are low and the rooms wide. It's a masculine architecture, with heavy use of stained wood, natural stone fireplaces; it is sturdy and heavy and though very open, the low ceilings make the rooms cozy. Wright usually designed the furniture and no area of the building is wasted. Everything has a purpose.

In 1914, Frank Lloyd Wright was commissioned to build the Midway Gardens in Chicago. This civic arena hosts concerts and exhibitions with numerous buildings connected by terraces and surrounding a large outdoor arena. While Wright was in Chicago overseeing the construction, his lover Mamah Borthwick Chene was at their home, Taliesin, in Wisconsin, with her two children and was entertaining numerous houseguests.

After dinner was served, the butler quietly excused himself, went outside, nailed the windows shut and set fire to the home. For anyone lucky enough to find the one unlocked door, the crazed butler stood just outside with an axe and hacked the ones trying to escape. All together, 6 were murdered. The butler was apprehended, but no motive was ever determined.

Frank Lloyd Wright

Despite this tragedy, Wright continued working, rebuilding Taliesin and finishing Midway Gardens.

He went on to build the Imperial Hotel, which withstood the Kanto earthquake in Tokyo in 1923, as well as his famous Johnson Wax Administration Building in Racine Wisconsin. With this building, Wright had a vision of lily pads supporting the ceiling, and he realized it. Fallingwater, his most famous house, built on a waterfall in rural Pennsylvania, was also built during this period.

During this time, the Taliesin Fellowship, the Taliesin Associated Architects, the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture, and the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation were also founded. Wright also published An Autobiography and The Disappearing City at age 65.

Amazingly, it wasn't until 1958 that the Guggenheim was built in New York City, the same year that he published The Living City, a model of which is on display, along with many of his sketches, notes, photos, and pieces at The Municipal House.

Of the more than 1,100 projects Wright designed during his lifetime, nearly one-third were created during the last decade of his nearly century-long life. Wright was tireless in his efforts to create an architecture that was truly American. Every time adversity came his way, Wright conquered it, reinventing himself and staying ahead of his peers with his innovative designs. And here we are, in Prague, admiring his work decades after it changed the world.

Comments
Add New Search
Thanx
ivan (89.251.104.xxx) 2009-06-28 23:52:35

thanx!
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Title:
UBBCode:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 
:angry::0:confused:
:cheer:B):evil:
:silly::dry::lol:
:kiss::D:pinch:
:(:shock::X
:side::):P
:unsure::woohoo::huh:
:whistle:;):s
:!::?::idea:
:arrow:
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 December 2008 16:59 )
 

Thinknovation

Karl's Weird News

Karl's Weird News
Links to weird, twisted and disturbing news for your entertainment and contemplation
  • The world can learn a lot from Romania
    Romanian street sign warns drivers of 'drunk pedestrians'Officials in Pecica, a village town about 13 miles from the Hungarian border in the country’s west, ordered the bright red signs, complete with the phrase “Attention - Drunks”. The 10 road signs, which also show a person crawling on their knees ...
  • Koreans push marriage to the next level
    Man marries pillowTrue love can take many forms. In this case, it has taken the form of a Korean man falling in love with, and eventually marrying, a large pillow with a picture of a woman on it. Lee Jin-gyu fell for his 'dakimakura' - a kind of large, huggable ...
  • Yeah, but are they anywhere as hawt as Gov. Paterson and his swinging wife?
    Nicolas Sarkozy and Carla Bruni 'both having affairs' Rumours that French President Nicolas Sarkozy and his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy are both having affairs are gaining momentum in France. The suggestion that the couple were both committing adultery first emerged on Twitter, the microblogging website. It was followed by ...
Seeking alternatives for developing autonomous regeneration of the environment? Tired of pollution causing damaging weather changes because of the choices we citizens make? The climate is our commons; it is the root of the world's communities. Deep thinking will be needed, depending on the dilemma facing Earth. Ecological and economic matters will suffer equally from our emission-based energies. Energy has lasting environmental impacts, something environmentalist groups have warned about for years. Environmentalists are not just people passing moral judgment, they are just keenly aware that resources are finite. Food, fossil fuels and the markets, are global as is their impact. How great it would be if we could green the earth and grow the economy? A cleaner environment contributes to better health, helping us begins by learning how industrial activities can merge into the ecologically sound lifestyle. There is no limit on what we can do if we keep in mind local impact of our production with the moral clarity of our obligation to protect Mother Nature. A new organic Participatory ecology is forming; we can no longer turn blind eyes to the actions of those who pollute. We can preserve future growth by recognizing the problems, establishing protocols, and setting benchmarks for recognizing pollution reduction. Instead of exploiting the earth's natural resources, we will rely on renewable resources to save our legacy. If this makes sense to you, and you're serious about finding a solution for earth restoring technological advances, we'd love to hear your thoughts. Share with us ideas, problems, experiences with new technologies and environmental trends about restoring nature's right to clean water and abundant wildlife.