Thursday, November 28, 2019
Frank Lloyd Wright Essays (1501 words) - Frank Lloyd Wright
  Frank Lloyd Wright    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 the greatest architect who will ever live. Yes, I  intend to be the greatest architect of all time. - Frank Lloyd Wright 1867-1959  CHILDHOOD  Born in Richland Center, in southwestern Wisconsin, on June 8, 1867  (sometimes reported as 1869), Frank Lincoln Wright, who changed his own middle  name to Lloyd, was raised under the influence of a Welsh heritage. The Lloyd-Jones  family, his mothers side of the family, had a great influence on Wright throughout his  life. The family was Unitarian in faith and lived close to each other. Major emphasis  within the Lloyd-Jones family included education, religion, and nature. Wrights family  spent many evenings listening to William Lincoln Wright read the works of Emerson,  Thoreau, and Blake. His aunts Nell and Jane opened a school of their own, pressing  the philosophies of the German educator, Froebel. Wright was brought up in a  comfortable, but certainly not warm household. His father, William Carey Wright, who  worked as a preacher and a musician, moved from job to another, dragging his family  across the United States. Possibly as a result of this upheaval, Wrights parents  divorced when while he was still young. His mother, Anna, relied heavily upon her  many brothers, sisters and uncles, and Wright was intellectually guided by his aunts  and his mother.  Before Wright was even born, his mother had decided that her son was gong  to be a great architect. Using Froebels geometric blocks to entertain and educate her  son, Mrs. Wright must have struck the genius that her son possessed. Use of  imagination was encouraged and Wright was given free run of the playroom filled  with paste, paper, and cardboard. On the door were the words, SANCTUM  SANCTORUM (Latin for place of inviolable privacy). Wright was seen as a dreamy and  sensitive child, and cases of him running away while working on the farmlands with  his uncles were noted. This pattern of running away from one thing or another  continued throughout his lifetime.   WRIGHTS FIRST BREAK  In 1887, at the age of twenty, Frank Lloyd Wright moved to Chicago. During the late  nineteenth century, Chicago was a booming, crazy place. With an education in  engineering from the University of Wisconsin, Wright found a job as a draftsman in a  Chicago architectural firm. During this short time with the firm of J. Lyman Silsbee,  Wright started on his first project, the Hillside Home for his aunts, Nell and Jane.   Impatiently moving forward, Wright got a job at one of the best known firms in  Chicago at the time, Adler and Sullivan. Sullivan was to become Wrights greatest  mentor.   LOUIS SULLIVAN: LIEBER MEISTER  Wright referred to Sullivan as Lieber Meister (beloved master). He admired his  talent for ornamentation, and his skill of drawing intricate plans and designs. Wright  picked up on the ways of Sullivan and soon became ahead of Alder in importance  within the firm. Wrights relationship between him and his employer caused great  amounts of tension between Wright and his fellow draftsmen, as well as with Sullivan  and Adler. Wright was assigned the residential contracts of the firm. His work soon  expanded as he accepted jobs outside of the firm. When Sullivan found out about  this in 1893, he called Wright on a breach of contract. Rather than to drop the night  jobs, Wright walked out on the firm. When Wright left the company, Sullivans  quantity of contracts declined quickly. Sullivan soon ran into economic troubles and  his international reputation dwindled by 1920. Sullivan was soon regarded as  worthless to the architectural world. He resorted to alcoholism and died in 1924  without regaining the glory of what was held in his early years in Chicago.   LIFE AFTER THE FIRM  Wright quickly built up a practice in residential architecture. At one point in his career,  Wright would produce 135 buildings in ten years. Wright took a different approach to  architecture by designing the furniture, light fixtures, and other things that were in the  structures that he made. He developed a unique type of architecture that was known  as the Prairie style. Dominated by the horizontal line, the style would make-up the  type of buildings designed in the 1900-1913 era of his career. Wright had two other  distinctive styles and a period for each one of them, one being the Textile block  (1917-1924) and the other the Usonian (1936-1959), which is the most familiar to  modern world.  In 1909    
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