![]() Wright designed 175 doors and windows for Robie House of which 163 original casements remain in the house today. Robie House was Wright’s last and greatest Prairie-style house and includes some of his best-known windows. Among Wright’s most significant glass programs from the era of his Oak Park Studio are the Ward W. Wright’s buildings follow the geometric principles he imposed on each project, and his glass designs also express the geometry that unites the building.īetween 18, when he stopped using leaded glass, Frank Lloyd Wright designed 163 buildings – of which 97 were constructed – that included leaded glass of his own design. Wright’s light screens illuminated his interiors with natural light, touched by the autumnal dashes of his color palette and animated by his exquisite visual geometries. Wright stated, “I was working away at the wall as a wall and bringing it towards the function of a screen, a means of opening up space.” But it was Japan that dominated Wright’s early aesthetic – the flat areas of color enclosed within black lines in the Japanese prints that he admired and the way in which the sliding shoji screens of indigenous Japanese architecture unite exterior and interior space. The sources for Wright’s glass designs range from the Froebel gifts of his childhood, to Louis Sullivan’s flat ornamentation, to the designs of the Vienna Secession. Known for their extensive use of clear glass with touches of color, the glass designs are all geometric abstractions unique to each building for which they were created. Creating ribbons of uninterrupted glass casement windows and doors in his Prairie style buildings, Wright conceived his windows as an integral part of his organic design. No other architect or designer of the modern era transformed the use of leaded glass in architecture as Frank Lloyd Wright.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |