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Prairie School --- Architecture --- architecture [discipline] --- Wright, Frank Lloyd --- anno 1900-1999 --- United States --- Prairie school (Architecture) --- Wright, Frank Lloyd, --- Prairie school (Architecture). --- United States of America
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Architecture, Domestic --- Prairie school (Architecture) --- Wright, Frank Lloyd --- Themes, motives.
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Profiles over one hundred buildings of architect Frank Lloyd Wright, ranging from the Home and Studio built in 1889 to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum built in 1956.
Prairie school (Architecture) --- Architecture --- History --- Wright, Frank Lloyd,
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It was in his house in Oak Park that Frank Lloyd Wright made his first contributions to the modern movement. In 1889 he designed the first part of the house, in 1895 he added to it for his wife, Catherine, and their family, and in 1898 for his architectural practice. The entire building was a learning laboratory of modern architecture. While not a Prairie School house, it led to the development of the Prairie School. Wright's constant changes to this complex paralleled the evolution of his early architectural work and career. There, with his young assistants, he rethought the plan, spaces, materials, proportions, and lines of American residential architecture, creating a revolution on the Prairie. His home and studio provided the architectural environment in which to experiment with his ideas in three dimensions. The house featured contemporary art work, oriental tribal rugs, and Japanese decorative arts chosen by Wright and his wife. The studio was decorated with classical plaster sculpture, Teco ceramics and selections from Wright's large collection of Japanese prints. Wright completed the interiors, toned in nature's hues, with furniture and built-in furnishings of his own design, harmonious to the whole. The masterful colour photographs of Jon Miller of Hedrich-Blessing show a glimpse into Wright's first haven, where he challenged prevailing notions about the country's architecture, and which he then left, to continue as one of America's most significant architects. Included in the book is a portfolio of historic black and white photographs of the building, a number of them taken by Frank Lloyd Wright himself.
Prairie school (Architecture) --- Architecture --- Maison individuelle --- Prairie school (Architecture) --- Bureau --- Wright, Frank Lloyd, - 1867-1959 --- Oak Park (Ill.) --- Illinois
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Architecture --- architecture [discipline] --- Prairie School --- anno 1900-1999 --- United States --- Noord-Amerika --- United States of America
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"This book focuses on the particular moment in Wright's career when he was experimenting with houses. Many of these residences are canonized as classic Wright. Other examples included here add a new level or depth to the study of the Prairie house movement. As Wright's work became more popular, he was commissioned to create prototypes of houses that anyone could afford and build. The warm and inviting photographs of these Prairie houses show the many aspects of style's national appeal."--Jacket.
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Prairie school (Architecture) --- Skyscrapers --- Bibliography --- Bibliography --- Sullivan, Louis H. --- Criticism and interpretation --- Bibliography.
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Architecture --- architecture [discipline] --- buildings [structures] --- Prairie School --- Dana House --- Wright, Frank Lloyd --- anno 1900-1999 --- United States of America
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