SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 72
As for the future—the work shall grow more truly simple; more
expressive with fewer lines, fewer forms; more articulate with less labor;
more plastic; more fluent, although more coherent; more organic. It
shall grow not only to fit more perfectly the methods and processes that
are called upon to produce it, but shall further find whatever is lovely or
of good repute in method or process, and idealize it with the cleanest,
most virile stroke I can imagine. As understanding and appreciation of
life matures and deepens, this work shall prophesy and idealize the
character of the individual it is fashioned to serve more intimately, no
matter how inexpensive the result must finally be. It shall become in its
atmosphere as pure and elevating in its humble way as the trees and
flowers are in their perfectly appointed way, for only so can architecture
be worthy its high rank as a fine art, or the architect discharge the
obligation he assumes to the public—imposed upon him by the nature of
his own profession.
“
“
 TOTAL DESIGN APPROACH: Work through every stage of the
project from holistic artistic design and vision in total till smallest
details of the interior and furniture. Personal stamp to every
detail in exterior and interior.
 From “FORM FOLLOWS FUNCTION” which was theoretical
approach of American architect Louis Sullivan till his own
theoretical statement “UNITY OF FORM AND FUNCTION”
 During rich career he has accomplished and built more than 400
projects. Many different period and styles during career.
 During his seventy-year career, Wright created over 1,100 designs
nearly half of which were realized.
 These included commercial buildings, apartment towers,
recreational complexes, museums, religious houses, residences
for the wealthy and those of more modest income, furniture,
lighting features, textiles, and art glass.
 In creating what he called an “architecture for democracy” he
redefined our concept of space, offering everyone the
opportunity to live and grow in nourishing environments,
connected physically and spiritually to the natural world.
 Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) was born in Richland Center, Wisconsin,
on June 8, 1867, the son of William Carey Wright, a preacher and a
musician, and Anna Lloyd Jones, a teacher whose large Welsh family
had settled the valley area near Spring Green, Wisconsin.
 Wright's parents divorced in 1885, making already difficult financial
circumstances even more challenging.
 F.L.Wright didn’t finish specialist college (due to lack of money and
family issues). He took draftsmanship course at the State University of
Wisconsin which he dropped and started to work for Sullivan studio.
 He wanted to become an architect and in 1887 he left Madison for
Chicago, where he found work with two different firms before being
hired by the prestigious partnership of Adler and Sullivan, working
directly under Louis Sullivan for six years.
• Louis Sullivan was the only architect whose influence Wright
acknowledged.
• During this period, the firm’s work included such famous designs
as the Auditorium Building, the Walker Warehouse, the Schiller
Building, the Transportation Building at the 1893 World’s
Columbian Exposition, the Chicago Stock Exchange, the
Wainwright Building, as well as the Getty and Ryerson tombs in
Chicago’s Graceland Cemetery.
• Wright was less influenced by Sullivan’s remarkable designs than
by his philosophy and manner of thinking.
•“the creation of architecture must be natural, intuitive,“ and
“evolve from and express the environment from which it grows.“
Walker Warehouse
Chicago Stock Exchange
Schiller Building
Getty and Ryerson
tombs in Chicago’s
Graceland Cemetery
 1924. CHARLES ENNIS HOUSE was made out of industrially produced
concrete blocks. Spirit of modernism interiors and applied technology is
used in ARTS & CRAFTS way, decorate façade in Mayan style, against he
spirit of Adolf Loos “ornament is crime”.
 F.L. Wright was impressed by high-rise buildings of Chicago and
transformations that modern technology brouight to architecture
and art. Problem of monumentality withing Sullivan and Wright
architecture got dual character: classical style and stone in city
and gothic style and shingle in suburb
 Inspiration found in book “Grammar of Ornament” from Oven
Jones – exotic, Chinese, Egyptian, Assyrian, Celtic ornaments
collected in a book. Owen Jones (1809 – 1874) was a London-born
architect and designer and one of the most influential design
theorists of the nineteenth century.
 In Wright’s atelier in Oak Park, mural presents a man of Arabia.
 The influential building blocks were developed by the German educator
Friedrich Froebel in the late 1830s and early 1840s. His system of “gifts“
was a highly structured program that taught discipline as well as simple
forms, geometric designs, and basic mathematical principles. Through
the Froebel gifts, Wright learned design principles in geometric form.
 From nature, he abstracted patterns and forms. Anna Wright
instilled in her son a love of nature’s beauty and variety. This
appreciation was reinforced during the summers Wright spent on his
uncle’s farm, where he became familiar with the cycles of growth
and change.
 Wright’s appreciation for music stayed with him throughout his
lifetime, a constant inspiration for his work.
 Later, Louis Sullivan, through his own abstractions of nature, taught
Wright how to analyze nature, not just as it appears at the moment,
but as a process of growth and an evolution from seed to plant to
flower to seed.
“A building is only organic when the exterior and the interior exist
in unison and when both are in harmony with the character and
nature of its purpose, its reason for existance, its location, and the
time of it’s creation.”
 Commercial building Prism
 House Heller, 1895
 House Husser, 1899
 In 1889, at age twenty-two, Wright married Catherine Lee Tobin.
 Anxious to build his own home, he negotiated a five-year contract with
Sullivan in exchange for the loan of the necessary money. He
purchased a wooded corner lot in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park and
built his first house, a modest residence reminiscent of the East Coast
shingle style with its prominent roof gable, but reflecting Wright’s
ingenuity as he experimented with geometric shapes and volumes in
the studio and playroom he later added for his ever-growing family of
six children.
 1894. Wright set up his own studio in Chicago. The split with Sullivan,
however, presented the opportunity Wright needed to go out on his
own. He opened an office and began his quest to design homes that he
believed would truly belong on the American prairie.
 The William H. Winslow House was Wright’s first independent
commission.
 These houses reflected the long, low horizontal prairie on which they
sat with low-pitched roofs, deep overhangs, no attics or basements,
and generally long rows of casement windows that further
emphasized the horizontal theme.
 Some of Wright's most important residential works are:
1. the Darwin D. Martin House in Buffalo, New York (1903);
2. the Avery Coonley House in Riverside, Illinois (1907); and
3. the Frederick C. Robie House in Chicago (1908).
 Important public commissions included:
1. the Larkin Company Administration Building in Buffalo (1903,
demolished 1950) and
2. Unity Temple in Oak Park (1905).
 Free open plan
 House living room assembled around the hearth (brick or
stone fire place) – moral and spiritual center of house
 House opens on the landscape
 Wide projecting roof
 Massive base
 Windows that occupy all sides
 Dominant horizontals and vertical chimney
 One level house plan
 Low slope roof
 Commercial buildings - unified space with light from above
(skylight) surrounded by galleries
Darwin D. Martin House
in Buffalo, New York
Frederick C. Robie House
in Chicago
 Frank Lloyd Wright designed some 14
buildings for Japan: an embassy, a
school, two hotels and a temporary
hotel annex, a commercial-residential
complex, a theater, an official
residence for the prime minister and
six private residences. Of these, six
were built: the Imperial Hotel and
Annex, the Jiyu Gakuen School, the
Aisaku Hayashi House, the Arinobu
Fukuhara House and the Tazaemon
Yamamura House.
 His 1893 visits to Japan’s national pavilion at the World’s Columbian
Exposition in Chicago had a lasting affect on the young architect. He
first went to Japan in 1905, and returned from the trip with a large
selection of prints, many of which he intended to sell. Later, he resided
in Japan while working on Tokyo’s Imperial Hotel, giving him the
chance to deepen his appreciation of Japanese nature and culture as
seen in woodblock prints.
 “At last I had found one country on earth where
simplicity, as nature, is supreme”
 He returned from his first trip to Japan with hundreds of ukiyo-e
(woodblock) prints, planning to sell them in America.
 Tokonoma as inspiration, center of house, interior divisions, flexibility
 Imperial Hotel, Tokyo, 1912 - 1922
U.S. Embassy (Project), Tokyo, 1914
Aisaku Hayashi House, Tokyo, 1917
Odawara Hotel (Project), Odawara, 1917
Ginza Motion Picture Theater (Project), Tokyo, 1918
Mihara House (Project), Tokyo, 1918
Arinobu Fukuhara House, Hakone, 1918
Tadashiro Inoue House (Project), Tokyo, 1918
Tazaemon Yamamura House, Ashiya, 1918
Imperial Hotel Annex, Tokyo, 1920
Shimpei Goto House (Project), Tokyo, 1921
Jiyu Gakuen School, Tokyo, 1921
Prime Minister's Residence (Project), Tokyo, 1922
Hibiya Triangle Building (Project), Tokyo, 1922
 Wright began designing the new Imperial Hotel in 1912, and
spent 11 years nurturing the masterpiece to completion. Located
on a prime site in central Tokyo, just across from Hibiya Park and
the Imperial Palace, the hotel had to serve a unique role:
pleasing foreign visitors with the latest amenities while
upholding Japan's proud aesthetic tradition.
 Although Wright's design was fairly classical, it included
controversial "floating foundations" to protect the structure
from Tokyo's frequent earthquakes. The H-shaped building
featured two three-story wings running the 500-foot length of
the site, with some 245 guestrooms opening onto interior
courtyards. The wings led to a seven-story building at the back,
containing a theater, cabaret and banquet rooms.
 Creatively exhausted and emotionally restless, late in 1909 Wright
left his family for an extended stay in Europe with Mamah
Borthwick Cheney.
 During this European period Wright worked on two publications
of his work, published by Ernst Wasmuth, one of drawings known
as the Wasmuth Portfolio, Ausgeführte Bauten und Entwürfe
von Frank Lloyd Wright, and one of photographs, Ausgeführte
Bauten, both released in 1911.
 Commissions:
1. 1913 for an entertainment center called Midway Gardens in
Chicago;
2. 1916, for the new Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, Japan.
 In August 1914, Wright’s life with Mamah was tragically closed:
while Wright was in Chicago working on Midway Gardens, an
insane servant set fire to the living quarters of Taliesin, and
murdered Mamah Cheney, her two children, and four others.
 Emotionally and spiritually devastated by the tragedy, Wright was
able to find solace only in work and he began to rebuild Taliesin in
Mamah’s memory.
 The years between 1922 and 1934 Wright had established an
office in Los Angeles, but following his return from Japan in 1922
commissions were scarce, with the exception of the four textile
block houses of 1923–1924 (Millard, Storer, Freeman and Ennis).
He soon abandoned the West Coast and returned to Taliesin.
 In 1928, Wright married Olga Lazovich (known as Olgivanna),
daughter of a Chief Justice of Montenegro, whom he had met a
few years earlier in Chicago. She proved to be the partner and
stabilizing influence he needed.
 With few architectural commissions coming his way, Wright
turned to writing and lecturing .Two important publications came
out in 1932: An Autobiography and The Disappearing City.
 At about this same time, Wright and Olgivanna founded an
architectural school at Taliesin, the "Taliesin Fellowship" an
apprenticeship program to provide a total learning environment,
integrating not only architecture and construction, but also
farming, gardening, and cooking, and the study of nature, music,
art, and dance.
An Autobiography and The
Disappearing City
Taliesin Fellowship
Taliesin Fellowship
'Saguaro Forms and Cactus Flowers.'
Rug design, 1955.
Scherzo. Rug design, 1955.
 Wright was by this time still considered a great architect, but one
whose time had come and gone. In 1936, Wright proved this
sentiment wrong as he staged a remarkable comeback with
several important commissions, including:
1. the S.C. Johnson and Son Company Administration Building in
Racine, Wisconsin;
2. Fallingwater, the country house for Edgar Kaufmann in rural
Pennsylvania; and
3. the Herbert Jacobs House (the first executed "Usonian" house)
in Madison, Wisconsin.
 Here he and the Taliesin Fellowship began the construction of
Taliesin West as a winter camp, a bold new endeavor for desert
living where he tested design innovations, structural ideas, and
building details that responded to the dramatic desert setting.
Herbert Jacobs House
Fallingwater
Taliesin West
 With the end of the war in 1945, many apprentices returned and work
again flowed into the studio.
 Completed public projects over the next decade included:
1. the Research Tower for the SC Johnson Company,
2. a Unitarian meeting house in Madison,
3. a skyscraper in Oklahoma,
4. Other, ultimately unbuilt, projects included a hotel for Dallas, Texas,
two large civic commissions for Pittsburgh, a sports club for Hollywood,
a mile-high tower for Chicago, a department store for Ahmedabad,
India, and a plan for Greater Baghdad.
 Wright opened his last decade with work on a large exhibition, Frank
Lloyd Wright: Sixty Years of Living Architecture, which was soon on an
international tour traveling to Florence, Paris, Zurich, Munich,
Rotterdam, and Mexico City.
Research Tower for the
SC Johnson Company
Unitarian meeting house
in Madison
Desk chair,
designed by
Frank Lloyd
Wright, 1936-7
Chair from the Isobel Roberts
House, designed by Frank Lloyd
Wright, 1908.
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career
Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Was ist angesagt? (20)

Flw
FlwFlw
Flw
 
Falling water
Falling waterFalling water
Falling water
 
richard neutra and walter gropius
richard neutra and walter gropiusrichard neutra and walter gropius
richard neutra and walter gropius
 
Architect Frank Lloyd Wright
Architect Frank Lloyd WrightArchitect Frank Lloyd Wright
Architect Frank Lloyd Wright
 
Frank Lloyd Wright Presentation
Frank Lloyd Wright PresentationFrank Lloyd Wright Presentation
Frank Lloyd Wright Presentation
 
Post Modern Architecture
Post Modern ArchitecturePost Modern Architecture
Post Modern Architecture
 
Richard neutra
Richard neutraRichard neutra
Richard neutra
 
Le corbusier
Le corbusierLe corbusier
Le corbusier
 
Ludwig Mies van der rohe
Ludwig Mies van der roheLudwig Mies van der rohe
Ludwig Mies van der rohe
 
Philip johnson
 Philip johnson Philip johnson
Philip johnson
 
Frank Lloyd Wright and his famous works
Frank Lloyd Wright and his famous worksFrank Lloyd Wright and his famous works
Frank Lloyd Wright and his famous works
 
Guggenheim museum in NYC
Guggenheim museum in NYCGuggenheim museum in NYC
Guggenheim museum in NYC
 
Norman Foster
Norman FosterNorman Foster
Norman Foster
 
Falling water house
Falling water houseFalling water house
Falling water house
 
Frank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wrightFrank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wright
 
Guggenheim museum,newyork
Guggenheim museum,newyorkGuggenheim museum,newyork
Guggenheim museum,newyork
 
Richard neutra (1892-1970)
Richard neutra (1892-1970)Richard neutra (1892-1970)
Richard neutra (1892-1970)
 
Louis Sullivan
Louis SullivanLouis Sullivan
Louis Sullivan
 
Frank lloyd wright 303
Frank lloyd wright 303Frank lloyd wright 303
Frank lloyd wright 303
 
LUDWIG MIES VAN DER ROHE - WORK AND PHILOSOPHY
LUDWIG MIES VAN DER ROHE - WORK AND PHILOSOPHY LUDWIG MIES VAN DER ROHE - WORK AND PHILOSOPHY
LUDWIG MIES VAN DER ROHE - WORK AND PHILOSOPHY
 

Ähnlich wie Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career

A Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright
A Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd WrightA Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright
A Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright
ProfWillAdams
 
Flwpt teacher packet
Flwpt teacher packetFlwpt teacher packet
Flwpt teacher packet
Cecilia Serra
 
Flw history3
Flw history3Flw history3
Flw history3
jcgarn
 
Frank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wrightFrank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wright
HillcrestPIA
 

Ähnlich wie Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career (20)

Frank Llyod Wright.pptx
Frank Llyod Wright.pptxFrank Llyod Wright.pptx
Frank Llyod Wright.pptx
 
FrankLloydWrightPPT.ppt
FrankLloydWrightPPT.pptFrankLloydWrightPPT.ppt
FrankLloydWrightPPT.ppt
 
A Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright
A Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd WrightA Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright
A Delicate Balance: The Legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright
 
Flwpt teacher packet
Flwpt teacher packetFlwpt teacher packet
Flwpt teacher packet
 
Fran k lloyd wright
Fran k lloyd wrightFran k lloyd wright
Fran k lloyd wright
 
AR. FLW.pptx
AR. FLW.pptxAR. FLW.pptx
AR. FLW.pptx
 
Frank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wrightFrank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wright
 
LTHP - Fall 2015 Ramble Brochure
LTHP - Fall 2015 Ramble BrochureLTHP - Fall 2015 Ramble Brochure
LTHP - Fall 2015 Ramble Brochure
 
Chapter 8 early modern architecture
Chapter 8   early modern architectureChapter 8   early modern architecture
Chapter 8 early modern architecture
 
ARCH417Class08
ARCH417Class08ARCH417Class08
ARCH417Class08
 
Flw history3
Flw history3Flw history3
Flw history3
 
Frank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wrightFrank lloyd wright
Frank lloyd wright
 
Presentation1111111.pptx
Presentation1111111.pptxPresentation1111111.pptx
Presentation1111111.pptx
 
Modernism Design Period
Modernism Design PeriodModernism Design Period
Modernism Design Period
 
Thomas church
Thomas churchThomas church
Thomas church
 
MODERN_FF(1)
MODERN_FF(1)MODERN_FF(1)
MODERN_FF(1)
 
John ruskin
John ruskin John ruskin
John ruskin
 
Wright House Presentations
Wright House PresentationsWright House Presentations
Wright House Presentations
 
Wright House Presentations
Wright House PresentationsWright House Presentations
Wright House Presentations
 
Fl wright research paper
Fl wright research paperFl wright research paper
Fl wright research paper
 

Mehr von Sandra Draskovic

Mehr von Sandra Draskovic (20)

De stijl, Neo-plasticism, Gerit Rietveld
De stijl, Neo-plasticism, Gerit RietveldDe stijl, Neo-plasticism, Gerit Rietveld
De stijl, Neo-plasticism, Gerit Rietveld
 
New Moderns - Deutsche Werkbund, Bauhaus, Expressionism
New Moderns - Deutsche Werkbund, Bauhaus, ExpressionismNew Moderns - Deutsche Werkbund, Bauhaus, Expressionism
New Moderns - Deutsche Werkbund, Bauhaus, Expressionism
 
Raffles Institute_Design past and present_Middle ages
Raffles Institute_Design past and present_Middle agesRaffles Institute_Design past and present_Middle ages
Raffles Institute_Design past and present_Middle ages
 
Raffles Institute_Design, architecture and birth of modernity - Art Nouveau
Raffles Institute_Design, architecture and birth of modernity - Art NouveauRaffles Institute_Design, architecture and birth of modernity - Art Nouveau
Raffles Institute_Design, architecture and birth of modernity - Art Nouveau
 
Raffles Institute_Staircase planning
Raffles Institute_Staircase planningRaffles Institute_Staircase planning
Raffles Institute_Staircase planning
 
Design and social responsibility, industrial heritage
Design and social responsibility, industrial heritageDesign and social responsibility, industrial heritage
Design and social responsibility, industrial heritage
 
Eclecticism, origin, principles and applications
Eclecticism, origin, principles and applicationsEclecticism, origin, principles and applications
Eclecticism, origin, principles and applications
 
Raffles International Institute_Procurement methods
Raffles International  Institute_Procurement methodsRaffles International  Institute_Procurement methods
Raffles International Institute_Procurement methods
 
Raffles International Institute_Forms of business ownership AUS
Raffles International Institute_Forms of business ownership AUSRaffles International Institute_Forms of business ownership AUS
Raffles International Institute_Forms of business ownership AUS
 
Mind mapping_Raffles International Institute
Mind mapping_Raffles International InstituteMind mapping_Raffles International Institute
Mind mapping_Raffles International Institute
 
Buyankhishig Park design
Buyankhishig Park designBuyankhishig Park design
Buyankhishig Park design
 
Buyankhishig Interior materials life cycle assessment
Buyankhishig Interior materials life cycle assessmentBuyankhishig Interior materials life cycle assessment
Buyankhishig Interior materials life cycle assessment
 
Branding Mongolia by Design, TEDx Ulaanbaatar Women, 2013
Branding Mongolia by Design, TEDx Ulaanbaatar Women, 2013Branding Mongolia by Design, TEDx Ulaanbaatar Women, 2013
Branding Mongolia by Design, TEDx Ulaanbaatar Women, 2013
 
RETAIL PLANNING, CASE STUDIES
RETAIL PLANNING, CASE STUDIESRETAIL PLANNING, CASE STUDIES
RETAIL PLANNING, CASE STUDIES
 
Sustainable design, Site analysis
Sustainable design, Site analysisSustainable design, Site analysis
Sustainable design, Site analysis
 
Birth of modernity Adolf Loos
Birth of modernity Adolf LoosBirth of modernity Adolf Loos
Birth of modernity Adolf Loos
 
Retail design and planning or How to design GREAT STORE
Retail design and planning or How to design GREAT STORERetail design and planning or How to design GREAT STORE
Retail design and planning or How to design GREAT STORE
 
Lighting design process_Raffles Institute_jun 2013
Lighting design process_Raffles Institute_jun 2013Lighting design process_Raffles Institute_jun 2013
Lighting design process_Raffles Institute_jun 2013
 
Raffles Institute_Staircase
Raffles Institute_StaircaseRaffles Institute_Staircase
Raffles Institute_Staircase
 
Raffles Institute_Foundations
Raffles Institute_FoundationsRaffles Institute_Foundations
Raffles Institute_Foundations
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdfVishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
ssuserdda66b
 
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please PractiseSpellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
AnaAcapella
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
ZurliaSoop
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 3pptx.pptx
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdfFood safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
 
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701
ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701
ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701
 
This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
 
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
 
Making communications land - Are they received and understood as intended? we...
Making communications land - Are they received and understood as intended? we...Making communications land - Are they received and understood as intended? we...
Making communications land - Are they received and understood as intended? we...
 
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdfVishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
 
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POSHow to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
 
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
 
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxUnit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please PractiseSpellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
 
Dyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptx
Dyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptxDyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptx
Dyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptx
 
Fostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds in the Classroom
Fostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds  in the ClassroomFostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds  in the Classroom
Fostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds in the Classroom
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
 

Frank Lloyd Wright Influences and stages in career

  • 1.
  • 2. As for the future—the work shall grow more truly simple; more expressive with fewer lines, fewer forms; more articulate with less labor; more plastic; more fluent, although more coherent; more organic. It shall grow not only to fit more perfectly the methods and processes that are called upon to produce it, but shall further find whatever is lovely or of good repute in method or process, and idealize it with the cleanest, most virile stroke I can imagine. As understanding and appreciation of life matures and deepens, this work shall prophesy and idealize the character of the individual it is fashioned to serve more intimately, no matter how inexpensive the result must finally be. It shall become in its atmosphere as pure and elevating in its humble way as the trees and flowers are in their perfectly appointed way, for only so can architecture be worthy its high rank as a fine art, or the architect discharge the obligation he assumes to the public—imposed upon him by the nature of his own profession. “ “
  • 3.  TOTAL DESIGN APPROACH: Work through every stage of the project from holistic artistic design and vision in total till smallest details of the interior and furniture. Personal stamp to every detail in exterior and interior.  From “FORM FOLLOWS FUNCTION” which was theoretical approach of American architect Louis Sullivan till his own theoretical statement “UNITY OF FORM AND FUNCTION”  During rich career he has accomplished and built more than 400 projects. Many different period and styles during career.
  • 4.  During his seventy-year career, Wright created over 1,100 designs nearly half of which were realized.  These included commercial buildings, apartment towers, recreational complexes, museums, religious houses, residences for the wealthy and those of more modest income, furniture, lighting features, textiles, and art glass.  In creating what he called an “architecture for democracy” he redefined our concept of space, offering everyone the opportunity to live and grow in nourishing environments, connected physically and spiritually to the natural world.
  • 5.  Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) was born in Richland Center, Wisconsin, on June 8, 1867, the son of William Carey Wright, a preacher and a musician, and Anna Lloyd Jones, a teacher whose large Welsh family had settled the valley area near Spring Green, Wisconsin.  Wright's parents divorced in 1885, making already difficult financial circumstances even more challenging.  F.L.Wright didn’t finish specialist college (due to lack of money and family issues). He took draftsmanship course at the State University of Wisconsin which he dropped and started to work for Sullivan studio.  He wanted to become an architect and in 1887 he left Madison for Chicago, where he found work with two different firms before being hired by the prestigious partnership of Adler and Sullivan, working directly under Louis Sullivan for six years.
  • 6. • Louis Sullivan was the only architect whose influence Wright acknowledged. • During this period, the firm’s work included such famous designs as the Auditorium Building, the Walker Warehouse, the Schiller Building, the Transportation Building at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, the Chicago Stock Exchange, the Wainwright Building, as well as the Getty and Ryerson tombs in Chicago’s Graceland Cemetery. • Wright was less influenced by Sullivan’s remarkable designs than by his philosophy and manner of thinking. •“the creation of architecture must be natural, intuitive,“ and “evolve from and express the environment from which it grows.“
  • 8. Schiller Building Getty and Ryerson tombs in Chicago’s Graceland Cemetery
  • 9.  1924. CHARLES ENNIS HOUSE was made out of industrially produced concrete blocks. Spirit of modernism interiors and applied technology is used in ARTS & CRAFTS way, decorate façade in Mayan style, against he spirit of Adolf Loos “ornament is crime”.
  • 10.  F.L. Wright was impressed by high-rise buildings of Chicago and transformations that modern technology brouight to architecture and art. Problem of monumentality withing Sullivan and Wright architecture got dual character: classical style and stone in city and gothic style and shingle in suburb  Inspiration found in book “Grammar of Ornament” from Oven Jones – exotic, Chinese, Egyptian, Assyrian, Celtic ornaments collected in a book. Owen Jones (1809 – 1874) was a London-born architect and designer and one of the most influential design theorists of the nineteenth century.  In Wright’s atelier in Oak Park, mural presents a man of Arabia.
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 15.
  • 16.  The influential building blocks were developed by the German educator Friedrich Froebel in the late 1830s and early 1840s. His system of “gifts“ was a highly structured program that taught discipline as well as simple forms, geometric designs, and basic mathematical principles. Through the Froebel gifts, Wright learned design principles in geometric form.
  • 17.  From nature, he abstracted patterns and forms. Anna Wright instilled in her son a love of nature’s beauty and variety. This appreciation was reinforced during the summers Wright spent on his uncle’s farm, where he became familiar with the cycles of growth and change.  Wright’s appreciation for music stayed with him throughout his lifetime, a constant inspiration for his work.  Later, Louis Sullivan, through his own abstractions of nature, taught Wright how to analyze nature, not just as it appears at the moment, but as a process of growth and an evolution from seed to plant to flower to seed. “A building is only organic when the exterior and the interior exist in unison and when both are in harmony with the character and nature of its purpose, its reason for existance, its location, and the time of it’s creation.”
  • 18.  Commercial building Prism  House Heller, 1895  House Husser, 1899
  • 19.  In 1889, at age twenty-two, Wright married Catherine Lee Tobin.  Anxious to build his own home, he negotiated a five-year contract with Sullivan in exchange for the loan of the necessary money. He purchased a wooded corner lot in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park and built his first house, a modest residence reminiscent of the East Coast shingle style with its prominent roof gable, but reflecting Wright’s ingenuity as he experimented with geometric shapes and volumes in the studio and playroom he later added for his ever-growing family of six children.  1894. Wright set up his own studio in Chicago. The split with Sullivan, however, presented the opportunity Wright needed to go out on his own. He opened an office and began his quest to design homes that he believed would truly belong on the American prairie.
  • 20.  The William H. Winslow House was Wright’s first independent commission.  These houses reflected the long, low horizontal prairie on which they sat with low-pitched roofs, deep overhangs, no attics or basements, and generally long rows of casement windows that further emphasized the horizontal theme.  Some of Wright's most important residential works are: 1. the Darwin D. Martin House in Buffalo, New York (1903); 2. the Avery Coonley House in Riverside, Illinois (1907); and 3. the Frederick C. Robie House in Chicago (1908).  Important public commissions included: 1. the Larkin Company Administration Building in Buffalo (1903, demolished 1950) and 2. Unity Temple in Oak Park (1905).
  • 21.  Free open plan  House living room assembled around the hearth (brick or stone fire place) – moral and spiritual center of house  House opens on the landscape  Wide projecting roof  Massive base  Windows that occupy all sides  Dominant horizontals and vertical chimney  One level house plan  Low slope roof  Commercial buildings - unified space with light from above (skylight) surrounded by galleries
  • 22.
  • 23. Darwin D. Martin House in Buffalo, New York
  • 24. Frederick C. Robie House in Chicago
  • 25.  Frank Lloyd Wright designed some 14 buildings for Japan: an embassy, a school, two hotels and a temporary hotel annex, a commercial-residential complex, a theater, an official residence for the prime minister and six private residences. Of these, six were built: the Imperial Hotel and Annex, the Jiyu Gakuen School, the Aisaku Hayashi House, the Arinobu Fukuhara House and the Tazaemon Yamamura House.
  • 26.  His 1893 visits to Japan’s national pavilion at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago had a lasting affect on the young architect. He first went to Japan in 1905, and returned from the trip with a large selection of prints, many of which he intended to sell. Later, he resided in Japan while working on Tokyo’s Imperial Hotel, giving him the chance to deepen his appreciation of Japanese nature and culture as seen in woodblock prints.  “At last I had found one country on earth where simplicity, as nature, is supreme”  He returned from his first trip to Japan with hundreds of ukiyo-e (woodblock) prints, planning to sell them in America.  Tokonoma as inspiration, center of house, interior divisions, flexibility
  • 27.  Imperial Hotel, Tokyo, 1912 - 1922 U.S. Embassy (Project), Tokyo, 1914 Aisaku Hayashi House, Tokyo, 1917 Odawara Hotel (Project), Odawara, 1917 Ginza Motion Picture Theater (Project), Tokyo, 1918 Mihara House (Project), Tokyo, 1918 Arinobu Fukuhara House, Hakone, 1918 Tadashiro Inoue House (Project), Tokyo, 1918 Tazaemon Yamamura House, Ashiya, 1918 Imperial Hotel Annex, Tokyo, 1920 Shimpei Goto House (Project), Tokyo, 1921 Jiyu Gakuen School, Tokyo, 1921 Prime Minister's Residence (Project), Tokyo, 1922 Hibiya Triangle Building (Project), Tokyo, 1922
  • 28.  Wright began designing the new Imperial Hotel in 1912, and spent 11 years nurturing the masterpiece to completion. Located on a prime site in central Tokyo, just across from Hibiya Park and the Imperial Palace, the hotel had to serve a unique role: pleasing foreign visitors with the latest amenities while upholding Japan's proud aesthetic tradition.  Although Wright's design was fairly classical, it included controversial "floating foundations" to protect the structure from Tokyo's frequent earthquakes. The H-shaped building featured two three-story wings running the 500-foot length of the site, with some 245 guestrooms opening onto interior courtyards. The wings led to a seven-story building at the back, containing a theater, cabaret and banquet rooms.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41.  Creatively exhausted and emotionally restless, late in 1909 Wright left his family for an extended stay in Europe with Mamah Borthwick Cheney.  During this European period Wright worked on two publications of his work, published by Ernst Wasmuth, one of drawings known as the Wasmuth Portfolio, Ausgeführte Bauten und Entwürfe von Frank Lloyd Wright, and one of photographs, Ausgeführte Bauten, both released in 1911.  Commissions: 1. 1913 for an entertainment center called Midway Gardens in Chicago; 2. 1916, for the new Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, Japan.
  • 42.  In August 1914, Wright’s life with Mamah was tragically closed: while Wright was in Chicago working on Midway Gardens, an insane servant set fire to the living quarters of Taliesin, and murdered Mamah Cheney, her two children, and four others.  Emotionally and spiritually devastated by the tragedy, Wright was able to find solace only in work and he began to rebuild Taliesin in Mamah’s memory.  The years between 1922 and 1934 Wright had established an office in Los Angeles, but following his return from Japan in 1922 commissions were scarce, with the exception of the four textile block houses of 1923–1924 (Millard, Storer, Freeman and Ennis). He soon abandoned the West Coast and returned to Taliesin.
  • 43.  In 1928, Wright married Olga Lazovich (known as Olgivanna), daughter of a Chief Justice of Montenegro, whom he had met a few years earlier in Chicago. She proved to be the partner and stabilizing influence he needed.  With few architectural commissions coming his way, Wright turned to writing and lecturing .Two important publications came out in 1932: An Autobiography and The Disappearing City.  At about this same time, Wright and Olgivanna founded an architectural school at Taliesin, the "Taliesin Fellowship" an apprenticeship program to provide a total learning environment, integrating not only architecture and construction, but also farming, gardening, and cooking, and the study of nature, music, art, and dance.
  • 44. An Autobiography and The Disappearing City Taliesin Fellowship
  • 46. 'Saguaro Forms and Cactus Flowers.' Rug design, 1955. Scherzo. Rug design, 1955.
  • 47.  Wright was by this time still considered a great architect, but one whose time had come and gone. In 1936, Wright proved this sentiment wrong as he staged a remarkable comeback with several important commissions, including: 1. the S.C. Johnson and Son Company Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin; 2. Fallingwater, the country house for Edgar Kaufmann in rural Pennsylvania; and 3. the Herbert Jacobs House (the first executed "Usonian" house) in Madison, Wisconsin.  Here he and the Taliesin Fellowship began the construction of Taliesin West as a winter camp, a bold new endeavor for desert living where he tested design innovations, structural ideas, and building details that responded to the dramatic desert setting.
  • 49.  With the end of the war in 1945, many apprentices returned and work again flowed into the studio.  Completed public projects over the next decade included: 1. the Research Tower for the SC Johnson Company, 2. a Unitarian meeting house in Madison, 3. a skyscraper in Oklahoma, 4. Other, ultimately unbuilt, projects included a hotel for Dallas, Texas, two large civic commissions for Pittsburgh, a sports club for Hollywood, a mile-high tower for Chicago, a department store for Ahmedabad, India, and a plan for Greater Baghdad.  Wright opened his last decade with work on a large exhibition, Frank Lloyd Wright: Sixty Years of Living Architecture, which was soon on an international tour traveling to Florence, Paris, Zurich, Munich, Rotterdam, and Mexico City.
  • 50. Research Tower for the SC Johnson Company Unitarian meeting house in Madison
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55.
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 58.
  • 59. Desk chair, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1936-7 Chair from the Isobel Roberts House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1908.