Frank Lloyd Wright. Frank Lloyd Wright (1869-1959) Frank Lloyd Wright’s life spans two important periods: from the late 19th century to the mid-20th century,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
William Fremd High School
Advertisements

American Literature Introduction.
American Romanticism
A.
Geography and Early Greek Civilization
Frank Lloyd Wright Age 22 in about 1889 AGE 89 IN 1956 ARCHITECT, INTERIOR DESIGNER, WRITER AND EDUCATOR.
PAUL KLEE December 18,1879 – June 29, 1940
Frank Lloyd Wright Prairie Style Architecture. Importance of Prairie Architecture in Chicago Area One of the few architectural styles born in America.
Walt Whitman (stop at 6:50)
James Langston Hughes By: Chelsea Going. James Langston Hughes.
Unit Three: From Romanticism to Realism Page:
 All the colonies developed economies that allowed settlers to survive & even prosper, yet each colony differed in its religious, cultural, & political.
CRES Mastery Extension  Frank Lloyd Wright was an American architect.  One of his most famous building is called Fallingwater as shown on the right.
By: Scott Myers. Frank Lloyd Wright Biography Famous Architecture Contributions Quotes Multiple Choice Key Terms.
The Harlem Renaissance ~ ~ “The Harlem Renaissance transformed African-American identity and history, but it also transformed American culture.
Contemporary Architectural Pioneer and Modernist of the Century
Frank Lloyd Wright "...having a good start, not only do I fully intend to be the greatest architect who has yet lived, but fully intend to be.
Frank Lloyd Wright American Architect. Photo of Frank Lloyd Wright 1958.
Louis Sullivan & Frank Lloyd Wright presented by The Greatest Architects of America.
The American Transcendental Movement. Earliest American Literature to the Romantic Era Earliest Literature to 1800: Native Americans Puritan and Colonial.
Frank Lloyd Wright lifespan anchors him in Arts and Crafts.
Chapter 14 Section 3 A Creative Era Jazz music gained a wide following during the 20’s. It began down south from West African rhythms, African American.
By: Altavia Lowe 1/21/11. William Faulkner Interesting Facts  The quality and quantity of Faulkner's literary output were achieved despite a lifelong.
Frank Lloyd Wright one of America’s most influential and prolific architects - involved in both residential (mostly) and commercial architecture.
The United States of America. The Flag Presidents History New York Washington, DC
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
American Romanticism American Renaissance A Literary Coming of Age
American Romanticism
A Growing Nation ( ) Literature of the Period.
Variations and Departures Authors: Walt WhitmanWalt Whitman Emily DickinsonEmily Dickinson Mark TwainMark Twain Ambrose BierceAmbrose Bierce.
Walt Whitman. Life: Born in Long Island: saw the rural Long Island with fishers/famers; beginning community of Brooklyn; great harbor with ships;
LANGSTON HUGHES Honors English 11. Early Life Born James Mercer Langston Hughes on February 1, 1902 in Joplin, Missouri His parents divorced when he was.
Frank Lloyd Wright “I’VE BEEN ACCUSED OF SAYING I WAS THE GREATEST ARCHITECT IN THE WORLD AND IF I HAD SAID SO, I DON’T THINK IT WOULD BE VERY ARROGANT…”
1 American Romanticism Introduction The theme of journey as a declaration of independence The theme of journey as a declaration of independence.
BELLWORK 1.Where is Macedonia located? 2.What were Phillip II’s three goals as king of Macedonia? Were these goals accomplished? 3.How did Phillip II die?
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT Architecture. Frank Lloyd Wright  American Architect, 1867 – 1959  Experimented with forms and materials  Recognized as one of the.
Chapter 14: A New Spirit of Change Section 4: Abolition and Women’s Rights.
Introduction to Ernest Hemingway
Frank Lloyd Wright. Robie HousePraire Style, Oak Park.
RALPH ELLISON March 1, 1914 – April 16, Background  Born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma – frontier state with no history of slavery, modern view 
Transcending Romanticism The Transcendentalist Movement American Literature.
I NDUSTRIALIZATION AND NATIONALISM Chapter 19. I NDUSTRIAL R EVOLUTION During the Industrial Revolution, there was a trend from the traditional farming.
By Ben Goldbaum.  Frank Lloyd Wright was a world renowned architect, born in 1867 in Richland Center, Wisconsin. Sadly, Frank passed away in 1959, living.
Unit 2: Optimism for A New Day: Romanticism and Trancendentalism.
Transcendentalism The ideas of the transcendentalists still are very evident in society today. Letting nature fuel us and that it is vital to life Believe.
The Hudson River School Look at the paintings on the next three slides. Identify traits which they all have in common.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism (ish)
Let The Dead Bury The Dead By Pastor Fee Soliven Matthew 8:18-27 Wednesday Evening May 13, 2015.
Ancient Greece  Greece lies on a peninsula that reaches out into the Mediterranean Sea east of Italy.
Architecture & Frank Lloyd Wright. What does an Architect do? Design (plan) buildings.
Romanticism 1820s-1890s. The Time Period In America, 1820s-1890s In America, 1820s-1890s Development of the Civil War in America meant increased political.
An Age of Transition. A Cultural Divide  Northern economy based on trade and industry; Southern based on agriculture and slavery  Slavery’s expansion.
Frank Lloyd Wright By Grace and Leiloa
Frank Lloyd Wright. Early Life He was Born in 1867 In Richland Center Wisconsin Later moved to Madison Wisconsin He spent his summers in Spring Green.
Anti-Transcendentalism (Gothic) Nathaniel HawthorneHerman Melville.
IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION CHANGES IN AMERICA. A FLOOD OF IMMIGRANTS Old Immigrants Before 1865, people who came to America, excluding African Americans,
American Romanticism Major Authors William Cullen Bryant, Holmes, Whittier, Longfellow, and Lowell are Romantic poets Washington Irving is.
Frank Lloyd Wright.
Prairie Style Architecture
Prairie Style Architecture
Frank Lloyd Wright Born in Richland Center, Wisconsin
Introduction to Ernest Hemingway
Prairie Style Architecture
American Romanticism American Romanticism
Prairie Style Architecture
Prairie Style Architecture
Presentation transcript:

Frank Lloyd Wright

Frank Lloyd Wright ( ) Frank Lloyd Wright’s life spans two important periods: from the late 19th century to the mid-20th century, the eras before and after World War I and the period between the wars and after World War II. As a person, he embodied some of the most characteristic attitudes of his age. He had a supreme confidence in the future and a romantic yearning for the pre-industrial past. He had the very American attitude of a deep interest in flux and flow, expanding energies, and dynamism coupled with a search for unifying principles and organic coherence. These ideas are related to his interest in continuous space brought together into unifying shapes.

In an article in Architectural Forum (May 1953, p.106) entitled “The Language of Organic Architecture,” Wright made the following statement: Space. The continual becoming: invisible fountain from which all rhythms flow and to which they must pass. Beyond time or infinity. Prominent images in Wright’s writings and language are terms such as “continuous becoming,” with allusions to rivers, seas, and the American prairie. It relates to 19th-century thinking about historical and biological evolution, the geology of the earth in process. But within the continuous becoming emerges a giant individualism characterized by arrogance, loneliness, and mobility--qualities that typify American culture in myriad ways.

For Wright, the final polarity was nature and civilization. This polarity was related to the opposition between confidence in science and the search or yearning for a primordial past, natural laws, instinctive order Wright loved the land, not just as a setting or foil against which to play out a scenario but as itself an expression of intrinsic natural evolution and organic principles. He always sought an intrinsic relationship between his architecture and its natural setting. This is not so difficult if you live your entire life in one landscape setting. Yet, Wright built all over North America in the most diverse locations. The principle he used was the intention to echo natural form in abstract shapes and rhythms.

Wright was born in either 1867 or he never admitted the correct date. The Civil War had ended. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Herman Melville, and Walt Whitman were still alive and contributing to American culture. Wright was born on a farm near Madison, Wisconsin, and reared as a country boy with a rural arrogance (“Defend the rural areas of Wisconsin against the ‘Slickers’!”). His father was a Unitarian circuit preacher and musician. His mother was a Welsh woman of strong will and heavy influence. Wright’s father disappeared when Frank was 12 years old. His mother aimed to make her son into an architect. She hung pictures of Salisbury Cathedral in his nursery and bought Froebel blocks for him to play with. These blocks were his introduction to Euclidean geometry.

Country school and manual labor instilled conservative principles and a value for work in Wright’s mind. All this later became part of the Taliesin program at Spring Green, Wisconsin, and at Scottsdale, Arizona. The Wright family motto was “Truth Against the World.” Wright spent a year and a half in the School of Engineering at the University of Wisconsin. In 1887, he set out for Chicago “equipped with nothing but genius,” he later wrote. This was the classic story of the country boy going to the city to seek his fortune. He financed the trip by selling the mink collar his mother had sewn to his coat; and he carried a copy of Plutarch’s Lives of the Most Imminent Men.

Wright ended up in the offices of Adler and Sullivan whose career was at its zenith around the 1890s. He offered himself to Sullivan as a draftsman and as a “sympathetic though critical listener.” Wright recognized Sullivan’s romanticism and his talent. Wright called Sullivan his “Lieber Meister” or “beloved master.” He always acknowledged his debt to Sullivan’s formative influence, but also under-dramatized the freedom offered by the architectural environment of the Chicago Renaissance. He also underplayed the debt he owed to Richardson.

Ward Willits House, Highland Park, IL, 1902

Wright and the Prairie House Among Wright’s notable accomplishments is the concept of the “Prairie House” and what has been termed the “prairie style.” There is no prairie to be found in Chicago or its suburbs or in Wright’s own Wisconsin. The true prairie is part of the Great Plains in Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas, perhaps southern Illinois. For Wright, the prairie was the essence of the middle west, something indigenous to which the East Coast could lay no claim. The prairie represented freedom, democracy, opportunity, closeness to nature, closeness to the earth, all of life as a single great work of creation. He believe American domestic architecture should express this. There is no simple, straight-forward definition of this. The symbolism is complex.

The Robie House, Chicago, IL,

Plan, Lower Level Plan, Main Floor

The Larkin Company Administration Building, Buffalo, NY

Unitarian Universalist Church (Unity Temple), Oak Park, IL, 1906