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| Essential
Architecture- Search by architect
Frank Lloyd Wright
Usonian
Prairie School |
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No single individual transformed 20th-century
residential architecture more than Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959),
undoubtedly America's most famous architect. A native of Wisconsin, Wright
had little formal architectural training before coming to Chicago at the age
of 20, where he secured employment as a draftsman in the architectural
office of Joseph Lyman Silsbee and, soon after, with Adler & Sullivan. Under
the guidance of Louis H. Sullivan, Wright learned to approach the practice
of architecture as a creative abstraction of a structure's function,
environment, and technology, rather than relying upon accepted conventions
and historical precedents.

Wright established his own office in 1893, soon operating out of his home
and studio in the suburb of Oak Park. Many of his employees, including Barry
Byrne (Immaculata School), William Drummond, Walter Burley Griffin (Griffin
Place District), and Marion Mahoney, also went on to significant
architectural careers. Wright's early 20th-century residential designs,
popularly referred to as "Prairie Style," represent an approach to
architecture that defies stylistic categorization. At a time when typical
American homes were planned as box-like shells with a honeycomb of
individual rooms, Wright's houses embodied a flowing, human-scaled
complexity that reflected ideal living conditions rather than rigid
enclosures.
Such Prairie-style buildings as the Coonley House (1908) in Riverside, IL,
and the Robie House (1909) are monuments in the history of architecture. His
experiments in the field of affordable housing (Waller Apartments, American
System-Built Houses, and Usonian houses) were particularly innovative. More
than 300 Wright-designed buildings were constructed; over 100 are in the
Chicago metropolitan area alone.
Among his later, well-known buildings are: the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo,
Japan (1922; demolished), Fallingwater (1935) outside Pittsburgh, Pa.,
Johnson Wax (1936) in Racine, Wis., and New York's Guggenheim Museum (1959).
So great is his fame that, following his death, he was honored with his own
U.S. postage stamp, as well as a song, "So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright,"
written by the popular musical duo, Simon and Garfunkel.
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| Larkin Building, Buffalo, NY, 1903 (H,S:1904) |
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| F. L. Wright house, Oak Park,
IL, 1889 |
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