Sunday, October 20, 2019
Frank LLoyd Wright and Architecture essays
Frank LLoyd Wright and Architecture essays Frank Lloyd Wright (1869-1959) is easily the most famous architect in history. His career (seventy years) spanned the entire development of modern architecture and was very important in shaping it despite his refusal to join the prominent architectural associations of his day. His buildings stand as a monument to the genius and inventiveness, which he brought to every aspect of his work. Frank Lloyd Wright is the most original and innovative, but he never attended an architecture school. As a child, he worked on his uncles farm in Wisconsin and described himself as an American primitive, an innocent but clever country boy whose education on the farm made him more perceptive and more down-to-earth. Early in life, I had to choose between honest and hypocritical humility. I choose the farmer and have seen no occasion to change.(Frank Lloyd Wright. Delmars.com). When Wright was fifteen years old, he entered the University of Wisconsin as a special student. He studied engineering because the school had no course in architecture. He left school after a few semesters and apprenticed with J.L. Silsbee and Louis Sullivan. After working with Sullivan for six years, Wright opened his own practice. During his seventy-year career, Wright designed 1,141 buildings, including homes, offices, churches, schools, libraries, bridges and museums. Of these designs, 532 were completed and 409 still stand.(FrankLloydWright.org). Wright pioneered a long, low style known as the Prairie house. He experimented with obtuse angles and circles, creating unusually shaped structures such as the spiral Guggenheim Museum (1943-1949). He developed a series of low cost homes, which he called Usonian. Most importantly, he changed the way people think about interior space- Space is the breath of art. Wright was married three times and had seven children. His work was controversial and his private life...
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