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Реферат: Wright, Frank Lloyd
Реферат: Wright, Frank Lloyd
By Nazar Demchuck
I. Introduction
Wright, Frank Lloyd (1867-1959), American architect, considered
one of the greatest figures of 20th-century architecture. However, both the man
and his work were controversial during his lifetime.
II. Life
Wright was born either in Richland Center, or in nearby Bear
River, Wisconsin, and grew up largely under the tutelage of his mother, Anna,
and his aunts and uncles on farmland near Spring Green, Wisconsin. His father,
a musician, abandoned the family in 1885. Wright briefly studied engineering at
the University of Wisconsin, displaying a knack for drawing, and in 1887 he
moved to Chicago, Illinois. From 1888 to 1893 he worked as an assistant at the
Chicago architectural firm of Adler and Sullivan, learning much before
embarking on an independent architectural path in 1893.
Wright's life was marred by marital problems, and the scandals
connected with them scared away many potential clients. He left his first wife,
Catherine, and their six children in 1909, after 20 years of marriage, and went
to Europe with Mamah Cheney, the wife of a client. Still married to Catherine,
he returned to Spring Green in 1911 with Cheney. There, he built a home and
studio that he called Taliesin after a Welsh word meaning “shining brow,” a
reference to the building's situation, clinging to the brow of a hill. Tragedy
struck in 1914, when a servant at Taliesin murdered Cheney, her two children,
and four other people, and set the house on fire. Wright began rebuilding
Taliesin soon afterward.
After Catherine granted him a divorce in 1922, Wright married
Miriam Noel, an emotionally unstable woman from whom he soon separated. In 1927
he obtained a divorce from Miriam. Only with his third wife, Olgivanna
Milanoff, whom he married in 1927, did he find the restful environment he needed
to foster his creativity. Wright and Olgivanna lived at a rebuilt Taliesin,
which became his studio and a center for training apprentices in his
architectural principles. Those who came to study with Wright at Taliesin also
helped farm the land. In the mid-1930s Wright built Taliesin West in
Scottsdale, Arizona, and from then on, the studio and apprentices moved to
Arizona for the winter.
Wright also supported himself by lecturing and writing. Among his
writings are An Autobiography (1932, revised 1943) and The Future of
Architecture (1953), a collection of his articles from the 1930s.
III. Work
Wright avoided anything that might be called a personal style.
Through all his designs, he was guided by principles that he termed organic
architecture. By this he meant that every building should relate harmoniously
to its natural surroundings and that a building should not be a static, boxlike
enclosure but a dynamic structure, with open, flowing interior spaces. To
achieve this organic design, he used geometric units, or modules, that
generated a grid. The first modules were squares, but Wright later used
diamonds, hexagons, and other geometric shapes, upon which he laid a
free-flowing floor plan. Another device Wright favored was the cantilever-a
long projection (often a balcony) that was supported at only one end. The grid
and the cantilever freed Wright's designs from being merely boxes with openings
cut into them.
A. Prairie Houses
Experimenting in many styles during the 1890s, Wright proved his
mastery of the architectural ideas of the time. Instead of pursuing those
ideas, however, he chose to use his principles of organic architecture to
develop the prairie house-a long, low structure that hugged the Midwest
prairie. A shallow roof emphasized its horizontal lines. Wright disliked
basements, and beginning with the William Winslow house (1893) in River Forest,
Illinois, his earliest independent commission, his buildings were set firmly on
the earth, rather than in it.
The first prairie house, the Ward Willits residence (1901) in
Highland Park, Illinois, followed a cruciform (cross) plan based on a grid of
39-in (99-cm) squares. A fireplace facing into the living room is at its center
or core. The entry forms one arm of the cross. Opposite it is the dining room.
The living room projects to one side, the kitchen and servants' quarters to the
other. The cross, or a variation of it, was Wright's favorite plan of this
period.
In the Willits residence Wright established basic spatial
principles he would follow in his prairie houses and his later designs. At the
approach to the house, Wright reduced space by using an overhanging roof, side
walls, and stairs that bring the person entering closer to the roof. All this
compression sets the stage for a dramatic explosion of space as one finally
turns into the living room. Wright's living rooms typically have a height of
one-and-a-half or two stories, but they seem much larger because of the
compression experienced before entering them. Wright also designed the
furnishings of many of his houses, or he had other designers create them to his
detailed specifications.
In 1908 Wright designed a smaller prairie house, in River Forest,
Illinois, for Isabel Roberts, his office bookkeeper and the daughter of an
earlier client. Modest in price, it was America's first split-level house, with
bedrooms a half story up from the living room and the kitchen a half story
down.
The crowning achievement of Wright's prairie architecture is the
Frederick C. Robie house (1906-1909) on Chicago's South Side. This long,
three-story structure stands no taller than the surrounding two-story houses. A
roof cantilever extends 6.4 m (21 ft) from the western wall of the house over a
west-facing veranda. On the south facade, 14 glass doors open onto a main-floor
balcony, which shades the 10 windows and 4 doors on the ground floor below. A
shallow roof overhang enables sunlight to enter through the main-floor doors in
winter but keeps sunlight out in the hot summer months. At noon in midsummer,
sunlight just reaches the foot of the glass doors, thereby leaving the interior
in shade. This design for a hot summer climate exemplifies the architect's
sensitivity to the environment.
B. Work in Japan and California
From the beginning Wright's goal had been to create a democratic
American architecture, providing designs for houses that middle-class families
could afford. However, most of his prairie houses were built for wealthy
clients. When he failed to achieve his goal, Wright abandoned America, prairie
architecture, and his first wife and went to Europe. There he produced the
Wasmuth portfolio (1911), a publication of drawings of his work; in many cases
Wright altered these drawings to make them appear more beautiful. His fame grew
as a result of this publication, and in 1913 Wright received a commission for a
huge hotel in Japan. The design and construction of this hotel, the Imperial
Hotel in Tokyo, kept him busy from 1915 to 1922. Built of reinforced concrete,
it was one of only a handful of buildings in Tokyo to survive intact a severe
earthquake in 1923.
On his trips to Japan, Wright frequently stopped in California,
and in the early 1920s he joined his architect son Lloyd Wright in southern
California. There he designed four houses built of patterned concrete blocks.
Steel reinforcing rods knit the blocks together to form walls in what Wright
called a textile block system.
C. Usonian Houses
Wright achieved his goal of low-cost, democratic American
architecture with his Usonian houses of the 1930s. Usonia was Wright's term for
the United States of North America, with an i added for a pleasing sound. The
Usonian house had a simple design, usually with an L-shaped floor plan. This
plan separated the noisier living space on one leg of the L from the quieter
bedroom space on the other leg. The floor was made of concrete slabs, typically
in a square grid of 4 by 4 ft (1.2 by 1.2 m) for easy construction. Pipes
carrying heated water ran beneath the floor and provided radiant heat. The
kitchen, which Wright called the workspace, and two supporting walls at each
end of the house were of masonry (brick or stone). Long wood panels,
emphasizing the structure's horizontality, were used for both interior and
exterior walls. Glass window walls on the inside of the L opened onto the yard,
while the wooden outside of the L closed the house off from the street.
The first Usonian house to be built was the Herbert Jacobs house
(1936) in Madison, Wisconsin. Wright created more than 50 such houses,
sometimes varying the L plan or using equilateral triangles, diamonds, or
circular segments as the module for the grid. In the 1950s Wright substituted
masonry for wood on the exterior, at first using blocks and then reintroducing
the textile block system he pioneered in California. The masonry blocks for the
system were 16 in (41 cm) wide and could be made by the client to reduce the
cost.
D. Fallingwater and Other Late
Works
Ironically, the work for which Wright is best known is one of his
largest and least democratic works: Fallingwater, built in 1936 for Pittsburgh
department store magnate Edgar Kaufmann. Cantilevered dramatically over a
waterfall in southwest Pennsylvania, Fallingwater is notable for its
relationship with the environment-it appears to emerge from the rocks above the
waterfall-and for bringing the outdoors inside. Not only does the waterfall
become part of the house-a staircase in the living room leads down to it-but
the wooded glen that surrounds the house is visible from every room. Concrete
balconies cantilever at right angles from the house's vertical stone core, and
a balcony off the main living space extends over the waterfall.
Another major commission of the 1930s came from Herbert F.
Johnson, president of the Johnson Wax Company in Racine, Wisconsin. It included
the company's Administration Building (1936) and Wingspread (1937), an elegant
house for Johnson that has four wings arranged in a pinwheel pattern around a
central core. The roof of the Administration Building's main workroom appears
to float above a forest of tall, tapered columns with broad, flat tops. Light
enters through skylights and long bands of glass tubing.
Aside from Fallingwater, the building for which Wright is most
remembered is the Guggenheim Museum (1957-1959) in New York City. Its spiraling
ramp provides a dramatic setting for art, although critics have questioned the
ramp's suitability as an exhibition space.
Wright's innovative designs and use of materials often drew
controversy. Builders doubted whether his cantilevers-especially at Fallingwater-would
support their weight. Others questioned the practicality of his designs, such
as that for the Guggenheim. Wright's legacy consists of more than 1,000
designs, nearly half of which were built. He continued working until his death,
two months before his 92nd birthday. Architects worldwide now employ grid
systems as well as the open type of floor plan he pioneered. The originality of
Wright's designs, his sensitivity to a building's surroundings, and his
creative use of materials-especially concrete and cement blocks-have been
widely recognized. A number of his buildings are considered national landmarks.
Список литературы
Donald Hoffman, Frank Wright’s Falling Water;Donald Hoffman Robie
House.
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