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         Architect Bio Frank Lloyd Wright:     more detail
  1. Frank Lloyd Wright: A Bio-Bibliography (Bio-Bibliographies in Art and Architecture) by Donald Langmead, 2003-09-30

81. Independent Study Fair Report
frank lloyd wright was the most famous architect of all time. frank lloydwright never attended architecture school but he attended a college with
http://www.oberlin.k12.oh.us/talent/isp/reports2001/annewright.html
Independent Study Fair Project Reports
Prospect School - Oberlin, Ohio Anne Frank Lloyd Wright
My topic is Frank Lloyd Wright. Frank Lloyd Wright was the most famous architect of all time. My project was going to be on Cass Gilbert but that was to small. I selected Frank Lloyd Wright for my topic because I have always wanted to be an architect or lawyer and, I choose Frank Lloyd Wright because I have been to his house and studio in Oak Park, Illinois. In addition I wanted to go to the house in Oberlin. Frank Lloyd Wright had an interesting life and style and, I choose Frank Lloyd Wright because he has houses in many of the towns and cities I have been to. To do my research I went to the library and found a book on Frank Lloyd Wright for kids but,I already had most of the information but, some new information too. To do my research I also went to www.yahooligans.com and www.yahoo.com to search Frank Lloyd Wright. I also found a web site www.pbs.org/flw and it was about a movie and it had a biography of Frank Lloyd Wright. If I just searched Frank Lloyd Wright at yahooligans.com I would not get many good sites back. So I found some good sites with good information and photos. My mom found found a web site for a house of his in Spring Field , Ohio. I also watched a show from HGTV which also helped.

82. Biography Of Frank Lloyd Wright
bullet, frank lloyd wright was born in Richland Center, Wisconsin., June 8, 1867and died http//architecture.about.com/library/blwright.htm. bio Link
http://www.bpl.lib.me.us/spcoll/wrightbio.htm
Biography of Frank Lloyd Wright Frank Lloyd Wright was born in Richland Center, Wisconsin., June 8, 1867 and died on April 9, 1959. When he was 15, Wright entered the University of Wisconsin as a special student. He studied engineering because the school had no course in architecture. Leaving school after a few semesters, he apprenticed with J.L. Silsbee and Louis Sullivan in Chicago in 1887. While working under Louis Sullivan, he began to design and independently build private houses for some of Adler and Sullivan’s clients. These "bootlegged houses", as Wright called them, soon revealed an independent talent quite distinct from that of Sullivan. Wright’s houses had low, sweeping rooflines hanging over uninterrupted walls of windows; his plans were centered on massive brick or stone fireplaces at the heart of the house; his rooms became increasingly open to one another; and the overall configuration of his plans became more and more asymmetrical, reaching out toward some real or imagined expansive horizon. The architecture of these houses served as the inspirational source for the Prairie School. Wright’s distaste for urban environments and his embrace of the natural environment are observed in the contrasting features of some of his finest buildings of the early 1900s: the Larkin Company Administration Building (1904; demolished 1950) in Buffalo, New York, and the Unity Church in Oak Park, Illinois; compared with Buffalo’s Martin House and Chicago’s Robie House. The houses are characterized by large, glazed walls, terraces, and low-slung roof overhangs.

83. Shop A&E And The History Channel : Homes Of Frank Lloyd Wright DVD
From Fallingwater to the Guggenheim Museum, frank lloyd wright created some of But his development as an architect is best seen in the three homes he
http://store.aetv.com/html/product/index.jhtml?id=72185

84. All-Wright Site - The Life Of Frank Lloyd Wright
frank lloyd wright founded the prairie school of architecture, and his art of The Taliesin Associated Architects, the frank lloyd wright School of
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/1469/flw_life.html
All-Wright Site
The Life of Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright was born as Frank Lincoln Wright in Richland Center in southwestern Wisconsin , on June 8, 1867 (a date sometimes reported as 1869). His father, William Carey Wright, was a musician and a preacher. His mother, Anna Lloyd-Jones was a teacher. It is said that Anna Lloyd-Jones placed pictures of great buildings in young Frank's nursery as part of training him up from the earliest possible moment as an architect. Wright spent some of his time growing up at the farm owned by his uncles near Spring Green, Wisconsin (also in the southwestern part of the state). Frank Lloyd Wright was of Welsh ethnic heritage, and was brought up in the Unitarian faith Wright briefly studied civil engineering at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, after which he moved to Chicago to work for a year in the architectural firm of J. Lyman Silsbee. In 1887, he hired on as a draftsman draftsman in the firm of Adler and Sullivan, run by Louis Sullivan (design) and Dankmar Adler (engineering) at the time the firm was designing Chicago's Auditorium Building . Wright eventuallly became the chief draftsman, and also the man in charge of the firm's residential designs. Under Sullivan, whom Wright called "Lieber Meister" (beloved master), Wright began to develop his own architectural ideas. In 1889 he married his first wife, Catherine Tobin. He also designed houses on his own toward the end, homes Wright called

85. All-Wright Site - Lists Of Links To Other FLLW Sites
frank lloyd wright Lucid Cafe. Biography largely derived from the Family Members; Book lloyd wright The Architecture of frank lloyd wright Jr.
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/1469/flwlinks.html
All-Wright Site This page contains organized links to other Frank Lloyd Wright sites in many categories. Please send me e-mail if you know of links to add, discontinued (dead link) sites, or sites that have changed their location. Links for buildings and and state-specific pages are found in the Building Guide . Some links to books are found in the appropriate categories. The arrows to the right of the category names let you go up a category, down a category, or to the top of the page. Most of the links in the categories are unique, but there are some major web sites such as the Building Conservancy that are appropriate for multiple categories. More than 200 unique links are found in this page, and hundreds more can be found if you go to the Building Guide section. These links were last checked and updated during March, 2002.
Lists of Wright links on this page:
  • Comprehensive Frank Lloyd Wright Sites
  • Official Frank Lloyd Wright sites
  • Preservation
  • Buildings ...
  • General-Interest Architecture Search for books on Frank Lloyd Wright,
    and also for books on any other topic
    (and music and more)
    Commercial Links
  • Stores
  • Real Estate
  • Prints ...
  • Other
    Comprehensive Sites
    Many of the sites in this category are the best of the Wright sites, offering a variety of information and pages.
  • 86. Frank Lloyd Wright - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    Selected Survey books on wright’s work. Architecture of frank lloyd wright, The,by Neil Levine; Architecture of frank lloyd wright A Complete Catalog,
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Lloyd_Wright
    Frank Lloyd Wright
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    Frank Lloyd Wright Frank Lloyd Wright June 8 April 9 ) was one of the most prominent architects of the first half of the 20th century. To this day he is easily America's most famous architect (topping Philip Johnson Louis Kahn , and Frank Gehry ) and still extremely well-known in the common public's eye.
    Contents
    edit
    Early Years
    He was born in the agricultural town of Richland Center, Wisconsin USA , and brought up with strong Unitarian and transcendental principles (eventually he would design the Unity Temple in Oak Park Illinois ). As a child he spent a great deal of time playing with the kindergarten educational blocks by Friedrich Wilhelm August Fr¶bel (popularly known as Froebel's blocks) given by his mother. These consisted of various geometrically shaped blocks that could be assembled in various combinations to form three-dimensional compositions. Wright in his autobiography talks about the influence of these exercises on his approach to design. Many of his buildings are notable for the geometrical clarity they exhibit. Wright commenced his formal education in at the University of Wisconsin School for Engineering , where he was a member of a fraternity Phi Delta Theta . He took classes part time for two years while apprenticing under Allen Conover , a local builder and professor of civil engineering. In

    87. Frank Lloyd Wright . Resources . Web Links | PBS
    Enroll at the frank lloyd wright School of Architecture and learn by doing inthis unique program that focuses on organic architecture.
    http://www.pbs.org/flw/resources/web_links.html
    Preservation Organizations Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
    http://www.franklloydwright.org/

    Formed by Frank Lloyd Wright himself in 1940, this foundation fosters advancing the ideas and principles of organic architecture, as well as preserving the legacy of Wright's life and work. Taliesin Preservation Commission
    http://www.taliesinpreservation.org/

    The mission of this society is to preserve the Taliesin estate in Spring Green, Wis. Find information about current events, tours of the estate, how to become a member of the preservation commission at this site. Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy
    http://www.savewright.org/

    National Trust for Historic Preservation
    http://www.nationaltrust.org/

    The National Trust for Historic Preservation provides leadership, education and advocacy to save America's diverse historic places and revitalize its communities. Society of Architectural Historians
    http://www.sah.org/

    This international nonprofit organization supports the study and preservation of architecture. Access scholarly research, graduate programs in architectural history and membership information. Local chapters of this organization are also featured. Biographical Information http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/1469/

    88. LA OBSCURA: Frank Lloyd Wright Biography
    A brilliant psychologist, frank lloyd wright, became the spokeman for Americanarchitecture around the world. He understood human needs and administered to
    http://www.usc.edu/dept/architecture/shulman/architects/wright/
    A brilliant psychologist, Frank Lloyd Wright, became the spokeman for American architecture around the world. He understood human needs and administered to them through his work. Above all he sought repose, a restful environment free of tension which catered to the mental health and happiness of the indweller. Born in Richland Center, Wisconsin, in 1890, Wright not only influenced this area with his Prairie Style architecture, but expanded to Los Angeles, Phoenix, New York, and eventually beyond the boundaries of the United States.
    Wright conceived of the interior space in terms of rooms overlapping and interpenetratingoften at the corners. Use areas were defined by screaning devices and subtle changes in ceiling heights. For Wright, spaces were defined rather than enclosed, and use was relative to the individual rather than absolute.
    Until the outbreak of war in 1914, Wright continually evolved the prairie house toward greater abstraction in Oak Park, near Chicago. Roofs and balconies gradually became flat, hovering slabs, and a geometric interplay between verticals and horizontals replaced an emphais upon wall. Even his non-residential work reflected this development: the Larkin Administration Building and Unity Temple reiterated geometric shapes and the uselessness of a visible roof.

    89. AllRefer.com - Frank Lloyd Wright (Architecture, Biography) - Encyclopedia
    AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon frank lloyd wright, Architecture, Biographies.
    http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/W/Wright-FL.html
    AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 18, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference Encyclopedia Architecture, Biographies ... Frank Lloyd Wright
    By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z W
    Frank Lloyd Wright, Architecture, Biographies
    Related Category: Architecture, Biographies Frank Lloyd Wright Sullivan in Chicago. Sections in this article:
    Topics that might be of interest to you: Bartlesville
    Chicago, city, United States

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    90. Frank Lloyd Wright Quotes
    frank lloyd wright The mother art is architecture. Without an architecture ofour own we have no soul of our own civilization.
    http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/f/franklloyd127711.html
    Atlas Dictionary Encyclopedia Geography ...
    Add the "Quote of the Day" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy!

    Web brainyquote.com Frank Lloyd Wright Quotes
    The mother art is architecture. Without an architecture of our own we have no soul of our own civilization.
    Frank Lloyd Wright
    Type:
    Architect Quotes

    Category:
    American Architect Quotes

    Date of Birth:
    June 8
    Date of Death: April 9 Nationality: American Biography: Frank Lloyd Wright Biography Amazon: Frank Lloyd Wright on Amazon Related Authors: Frank Lloyd Wright Louis Kahn Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Philip Johnson ... Michael Graves More Frank Lloyd Wright Quotations: A free America... means just... A great architect is not... A man is a fool... All fine architectural values... ... Why, I just shake the... Quote Keywords: Architecture Art Civilization Mother ... Without Dictionary Links: An Architecture Art Civilization ... Without Encyclopedia Links: Art Civilization Is Mother ... RSS Feeds About Us Inquire Privacy Terms

    91. Frank Lloyd Wright
    frank lloyd wright continued to create and give form to architecture until hisdeath in 1959 at age ninetyone. In his seventy-two years of practice,
    http://www.westcotthouse.org/frank/bio_frankLW.htm
    Frank Lloyd Wright History Restoration News ...
    Ladies Home Journal

    Wright in Ohio Westcott House
    Springfield, 1907 Weltzheimer House
    Oberlin, 1948 Staley House
    North Madison, 1950 Rubin House
    Canton, 1951 Dobkins House
    Canton, 1953 Penfield House
    Willoughby Hills, 1953 Boulter House
    Cincinnati, 1954 Feiman House
    Canton, 1954 Tonkens House Amberley Village, 1954 Meyers Medical Clinic Dayton, 1956 Boswell House Indian Hill, 1957 Frank Lloyd Wright Biography Frank Lloyd Wright is a name that is spoken synonymously with the advancement of American architecture in the early twentieth century. For seventy years he worked to push the architectural profession in America to new limits. Wright sought to create an architecture that reconciled men's and women's relationship with nature, and Wright's quest resulted in a style so successful and so innovative that, for once, instead of America's looking to Europe for new ideas, Europe's avant-garde looked to America's Prairie Style for inspiration. His influence in Europe coincides with the beginning of Modernism. Although at this time architecture in both America and Europe returned to classical styles, Wright held on to ideas he had seen in earlier exotic revivals and a uniquely American style, the Shingle Style. He was inspired by the open plans popular in the Far East, which he first applied in his design of the Winslow House (1893). From Japan, he borrowed the concept of the

    92. Frank Lloyd Wright Westcott Resources
    Enroll at the frank lloyd wright School of Architecture and learn by doing inthis unique program that focuses on organic architecture. wright on the Web
    http://www.westcotthouse.org/resource/resource_web.htm
    Frank Lloyd Wright History Restoration News ...
    Although Wright is believed not to have designed any other local buildingsresidential or commercial, two area houses do illustrate his influence.

    Resources
    Web sites
    Restoration Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy
    http://www.savewright.org

    The Conservancy is an organization devoted to preserving the remaining buildings designed by Wright. Find out where his structures are located and which ones are for sale. Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
    http://www.franklloydwright.org

    This foundation advances the ideas and principles of organic architecture and is the official archive of Frank Lloyd Wright. Taliesin Preservation Commission
    http://www.taliesinpreservation.org

    The mission of this society is to preserve the Taliesin estate in Spring Green, Wisconsin. Find information about current events, tours of the estate, and the way to become a member. Ohio Preservation Society http://www.ohiopreservation.org

    93. Frank Lloyd Wright: Resources In The Civic Center Library
    Two Chicago Architects and Their Clients frank lloyd wright and Howard Van DorenShaw. Romanza The California Architecture of frank lloyd wright.
    http://www.co.marin.ca.us/depts/lb/main/crm/flw.html
    FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
    Resources in the Civic Center Library
    Photograph by Karl H. Reik, originally published in
    the Civic Center Dedication Brochure, 1962. Architecture Abernathy, Ann. The Oak Park Home and Studio of Frank Lloyd Wright. Oak Park, Ill.: Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Foundation, 1988. Alofsin, Anthony, ed. Frank Lloyd Wright: Europe and Beyond. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999. Besinger, Curtis. Working With Frank Lloyd Wright: What It Was Like. New York, N.Y.: Cambridge University Press, 1995. Birk, Melanie. Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie. New York: Universe, 1998. Blake, Peter. The Masterbuilders: le Courbusier, Mies van der rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright. New York: Norton, 1976. Boulton, Alexander O. Frank Lloyd Wright: Architect: An Illustrated Biography. New York: Rizzoli, 1993. Brooks, H. Allen (Harold Allen). Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie School. New York, Braziller, 1984. Cleary, Richard Louis.

    94. Robie And Heller Houses--Architecture Of Frank Lloyd Wright By William Allin Sto
    An excerpt from The Architecture of frank lloyd wright A Complete Catalog ThirdEdition by William Allin Storrer. Also available on website online
    http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/776239.html
    To facilitate its use as a convenient field guide, this durable flexibound edition gives full addresses with each entry, as well as GPS coordinates, and offers maps giving the shortest route to each building. Preserving the chronological order of past editions, the catalog allows readers to trace the progression of Wright's built designs from the early Prairie school works to the last building constructed to Wright's specifications on the original site.
    Elsewhere on the web: FLlW Update publishes William Allin Storrer's continued research on Wright's life and work. A Robie House page on the website of the Frank Lloyd Wright Preservation Trust. Pages for Heller House and Robie House from the Chicago Commission on Landmarks. Steven Leigh's links to Wright websites
    The Robie and
    Heller Houses

    from
    The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright: A Complete Catalog: Third Edition
    by William Allin Storrer
    S.127
    Frederick C. Robie Residence (1906) 5757 WOODLAWN AVE., CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60637
    N 41" 48.386' W 87" 35.776' MAP 32
    ROBIE HOUSE With the Robie house, development of the Prairie cantilever reaches maturity. The cantilever was, to Wright, the second principle of organic design (the unit system, generating a regular grid, was the first). The west veranda is shaded by a cantilevered hip roof that reaches 10 feet from the nearest possible supporting member and 21 feet from the closest masonry pier.

    95. BIOGRAPHY
    London, Great Britain, 1997); frank lloyd wright in Chicago(Gothenburg, Sweden,1997); of The Chicago Athenaeum Museum of Architecture and Design.
    http://www.chi-athenaeum.org/biography.htm
    CHRISTIAN K. NARKIEWICZ-LAINE
    Christian K. Narkiewicz-Laine Awards: Architectural Critic's Fellowship from The Graham Foundation for the Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts in 1980; "Chicago's 40 under 40 Achievers" by Crain's Chicago Business in 1991. The Goldsmith Award by the Industrial Designers Society of America, 1993. His paintings, sculpture, and photography have been exhibited in the United States and throughout Europe. He resides in Chicago and Galena, Illinois and in Naxos, Greece.
    of The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design.
    All information and images on this website may not be used without the
    permission of The Chicago Athenaeum.
    The GOOD DESIGN logo was designed by Mort Goldshall in 1950. The Chicago Athenaeum

    96. Frank Lloyd Wright Bibliography [Books, Authors A-L]
    frank lloyd wright Architecture and Space. Baltimore Penguin Books, 1965. Romanza The California Architecture of frank lloyd wright.
    http://www.tblc.org/fsc/FLLW2a.html
      Frank Lloyd Wright A Bibliography of Materials in Roux Library
      Florida Southern College Randall M. MacDonald Books
      Authors A - L
      Adams, William Howard. Grounds for Change: Major Gardens of the Twentieth Century. Boston: Little, Brown, 1993.
      Alofsin, Anthony. Frank Lloyd Wright - The Lost Years, 1910-1922: A Study of Influence. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993.
      Banham, Reyner. Age of the Masters: A Personal View of Modern Architecture. New York: Harper and Row, 1975.
      [Special Collections 724.9 B216a1] Bardeschi, Marco Dezzi. Frank Lloyd Wright. (Twentieth Century Masters) London: Hamlyn, 1972.
      Blake, Peter. Form Follows Fiasco: Why Modern Architecture Hasn't Worked. Boston: Little, Brown, 1977.
      Frank Lloyd Wright: Architecture and Space. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1965.
      [Special Collections 927.2 W949B] The Master Builders: Le Corbusier, Mies Van Der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1960.
      No Place Like Utopia: Modern Architecture and the Company We Keep. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1993.
      Bock, Richard W.

    97. Welcome To The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
    “Organic Architecture” is the term frank lloyd wright used to describe his work . Organic Architecture, as frank lloyd wright defined it, means not just
    http://www.franklloydwright.org/index.cfm?section=research&action=display&id=80

    98. The New York Review Of Books: The Dreams Of Frank Lloyd Wright
    The news in early June came on what would have been frank lloyd wright s 138th The frank lloyd wright School of Architecture in Scottsdale, Arizona,
    http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18174
    @import "/css/default.css"; Home Your account Current issue Archives ... Email to a friend Review
    The Dreams of Frank Lloyd Wright
    By Michael Kimmelman
    Frank Lloyd Wright by Ada Louise Huxtable Lipper/Viking, 251 pp., $19.95
    Wright founded what he called the Taliesin Fellowship in 1932, when his own financial prospects were dismal, as they had been throughout much of the 1920s. Having seen the great Chicago architect Louis Sullivan, his former boss, die in poverty not many years earlier, Wright was forestalling his own prospective oblivion. Considered a virtual has-been ("as an architect he has little to contribute," concluded John Cushman Fistere in Vanity Fair The combination of Wright's achievement and his self-dramatizing personality have fed an insatiable appetite for books about him. Huxtable's compact biography is easily one of the most enlightened, sane, and accessi-ble, packing a great many perceptive thoughts about both life and work into a little more than 250 short pages. Wright, as Huxtable remarks at the start, was born just after Lincoln's assassination, and died in the space age. He did not see an electric light until the 1880s, when he went to Chicago as a young man looking for a job. By the turn of the century, he had revolutionized American architecture and become world famous thanks to his Prairie houses, low-slung family homes inspired by the flat midwestern landscape. He left for Japan near the end of World War I to build the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, another low structure consisting of five interconnected buildings. He returned in 1922 to the US, already old enough, and having fallen far enough out of fashion in the meantime, to be deemed over the hill. The 1920s and early 1930s were wilderness years for Wright. He struggled to find sources of income.

    99. Levine, N.: The Architecture Of Frank Lloyd Wright.
    of the book The Architecture of frank lloyd wright by Levine,N., published by Princeton University Press.......
    http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/titles/5725.html
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    NEW IN PRINT E-BOOKS ... HOME PAGE Winner of the 1997 Association of American Publishers Award for Best Professional/Scholarly Book in Architecture and Urban Planning
    One of Choice 's Outstanding Academic Books of 1996
    The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright
    Neil Levine
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    Reviews Table of Contents Levine conveys the meanings of the continuities and changes that he sees I Wright's architecture and thought by focusing successive chapters on his most significant buildings, such as the Winslow House, Taliesin, Hollyhock House, Fallingwater, Tailsen west, and the Guggenheim Museum. A new understanding of the representational imagery and narrative structure of Wright's work, along with a much-needed reconsideration of its historical and contextual underpinnings, gives this study a unique place in the writings on Wright. In contrast to the emphasis a previous generation of critics and historians placed on Wright's earlier buildings, this book offers a broader perspective that sees Wright's later work as the culmination of his earlier efforts and the basis for a new understanding of the centrality of his career to the evolution of modern architecture as a whole. Reviews: "Scrupulously researched, elegantly written (with a refreshing lack of jargon), beautifully illustrated and designed . . . the book is a feast for eye and mind, challenging assumptions and deepening understanding on almost every page. . . . Wright's ability to translate the poetic essence of a place into form was unrivaled, and no one has explored it with more insight than Levine."

    100. The World Authors Series – Sample Profile Of WRIGHT, FRANK LLOYD
    In the Cause of Architecture, frank lloyd wright essays/by wright for ArchitecturalRecord, 19081952; with a symposium on architecture by eight who knew
    http://www.hwwilson.com/print/8wright.html
    What's New Free Trials Orders Contacts ... Shopping Cart Abbreviated profile from World Authors 1900-1950 Return to World Authors WRIGHT, FRANK LLOYD (June 8, 1869 ) Frank Llyod Wright was born in Richland Center, Wisconsin, the son of William Russell Cary Wright and Anna Lloyd (Jones). His father was a musician and clergyman from New England, his mother a schoolteacher with strong roots in the Unitarian faith and community. After a peripatetic childhood, Wright's family settled in Madison, Wisconsin in 1880. Anna Wright sent Frank to work summers on his uncles' farms in nearby Spring Green. His time spent working in the vast, flat prairie fields of the Middle West shaped his vision of what was to become "organic architecture." In a lecture published in 1935, Wright remarked upon the importance of simplicity and space informing organic architecture, tracing its origins back to summers on the Lloyd-Jones' farmsteads, "You may see in these various feelings all taking the same direction that I was born an American child of the ground and of space, welcoming spaciousness as a modern human need as well as learning to see it as the natural human opportunity." About: Gill, Brendan: Many Masks: A Life of Frank Lloyd Wright. New York: G.P.Putnam's Sons, 1987. Heinz, Thomas A.: Frank Lloyd Wright: New York, St. Martin's Press, 1982. Spencer, Brian A. (editor): The Prairie School Tradition. New York: Watson-Gupthill, 1985. Sullivan, Louis H. The Autobiography of an Idea: Dover 1956. Secrest, Meryl: Frank Lloyd Wright: A Biography.Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. New York.1992.

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