Frank Lloyd Wright's home and studio
Oak Park Chicago, 1889
From 1886, 20-year old Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) trained at the Chicago offices of the famous firm of Adler & Sullivan, Louis Sullivan being Wright’s mentor. In 1893 Wright left the firm and set up his own practice. He built houses in the Prairie style, with long profiles, low pitched roofs, and strips of windows under the eaves. Geometric ornament was restrained. Soon he received better commissions, completing the Larkin Soap Co. in Buffalo NY (1906) and Unity Temple, a Unitarian chapel in Oak Park Ill (1908).
After travelling to Japan in 1905, Wright had a keen interest in Japanese art and architecture, collected Japanese woodblock prints and later set up studios in Tokyo. Japan was the country he described as the most romantic and beautiful! So he was keen to win the bid to design The Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, to replace the 1800 wooden building.
Imperial Hotel, Tokyo,
1922
In 1914, after Frank and Martha’s return to America, a deranged servant set fire to the bungalows of Wright’s Taliesin School of Architecture (see below) in Scottsdale Ar. Martha, her children, and four other people were killed. [In 1922, Kitty and Frank Wright were finally divorced, leading to 2 more marriages for Frank within 5 years].
The Japanese hotel opened in 1922 and became one of Wright's most impressive designs, showcasing Japan's modernity and enticing westerners. The elaborate Imperial Hotel kept Wright busy, but without American work, his profile suffered. And worse! In 1925 Taliesin burned again, due to an electrical fault, and Wright lost his huge stockpile of Japanese art. In 1929 the stock market crashed and Wright declared bankruptcy.
Wright’s work was exhibited between 1894-1959 which Kathryn Smith used in her book Wright on Exhibit to show how the architect used exhibitions to sustain his reputation. He tried for 5 years to secure an exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, finally succeeding in 1930, after the Architectural League in New York. Wright showed that for the previous 15 years, he’d been very active as an architect. The exhibition proved he'd moved beyond the single-family house to very large-scale commissions. Luckily the Architectural League exhibition earned praise in the New Yorker, New York Times and Time.
Architectural historians seeking the first signs of modernism in the U.S focused on these buildings, although Wright’s relationship with modernism was ambivalent. Nonetheless Wright was included in the new-founded MoMA’s seminal 1932 Exhibition of International Modernism, curated by Alfred Barr, Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson. The 3 men were devotees of the first generation of European modern architects, including Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius and their agenda for the MoMA show had been to promote the Europeans to an American audience. But the museum also wanted Americans, so some were added including Wright.
Of course Wright was already pitted against the white washing European modernists. This hostility informed The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand’s novel of feuding architects.
Fallingwater, 1937
Fallingwater’s fame spread in 1938, when NY’s MoMA dedicated a two-year travelling exhibition, A New House by Frank Lloyd Wright. It soon filled Architectural Forum, making it one of the most recognisable houses anywhere. A second MoMA exhibition opened following the completion of Fallingwater’s guest house in 1939.
Wright accepted the task for his generation of American architects. For there was surely being born into our world a new style, the style of America, the style of the civilisation of the C19th. Wright wanted to craft a specifically American idiom. The start of this organic architecture could be seen in the Prairie Houses of his early career, taken from the landscape of Wright’s native Midwest. The low sheltering roof, trees and flowers were abstracted as geometric patterns in the art glass windows, and leaves contributed their autumnal palette to the plaster surfaces. Wright also used biological metaphors in his buildings eg tree-like columns at the Johnson Wax Headquarters Building, completed 1939. Wright intended a broader and more sophisticated connection to the landscape, both physical and human. His architecture and planning forged an American identity that united land, people and democracy.
Neil Levine’s book The Urbanism of Frank Lloyd Wright was helpful, generating publicity at a difficult time. Wright persuaded Edgar Kaufmann (of Fallingwater fame) to fund the construction of a gigantic model of his Broadacre City idea in 1932, for public display. This City was a bold effort to grasp the Car Problem, a technology that later had horrible urban effects. Wright’s cars gave rise to one of his most interesting unbuilt designs, the Gordon Strong Automobile Objective, a drive-up viewing platform and planetarium proposed for a Maryland hilltop. A spiralling ramp ran up its exterior.
Broadacre dissolved the American city into the landscape, giving each inhabitant an acre of his/her own, uniting homes, industry and farmland. It was low-rise, with the few tall buildings set in wide parks. There were to be no trains or trams, only freeways with multi-level junctions. The car ruled: Wright valued homes by the size of their garage, as opposed to a modern centralised, congested city.
The Urbanism of Frank Lloyd Wright 2015 followed Levine’s earlier book The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright 1997. To make his case, Levine developed a thread from Wright’s earliest projects, including a plan for a residential sub-division of Chicago, and a 1928 scheme for 3 small towers at St Mark’s-in-the-Bowery in New York. The 1926 Skyscraper Regulation Project, a 9-block area of Chicago, was the first of several mega-projects. Even in the Depression, he continually recycled its plans and drawings.
Broadacre exhibition, 1935
Conclusion
While celebrating Wright’s 150th anniversary, the 2017 exhibition marked the transfer of the architect’s archives: tens of thousands of drawings, photos, letters and models. The 150th anniversary series ended with Wright's best-known building in Asia, the Imperial Hotel that combined western and Japanese design principles. The 150th anniversary saw much action: a show called Unpacking the Archive at the NY Museum of Modern Art and new books from his leading biographers. Wright’s reputation was looking good.
While celebrating Wright’s 150th anniversary, the 2017 exhibition marked the transfer of the architect’s archives: tens of thousands of drawings, photos, letters and models. The 150th anniversary series ended with Wright's best-known building in Asia, the Imperial Hotel that combined western and Japanese design principles. The 150th anniversary saw much action: a show called Unpacking the Archive at the NY Museum of Modern Art and new books from his leading biographers. Wright’s reputation was looking good.