Look up the word archiÂtecÂture in the dicÂtioÂnary, and though you won’t actuÂalÂly find a picÂture of Frank Lloyd Wright, it may feel as if you should. Or at least it will feel that way if you’re lookÂing in an AmerÂiÂcan dicÂtioÂnary, givÂen that Wright has been regardÂed as the perÂsonÂiÂfiÂcaÂtion of AmerÂiÂcan archiÂtecÂture longer than any of us have been alive. ExactÂly when he gained that staÂtus isn’t easy to pin down. Like all archiÂtects, he began his career unknown; only latÂer did even his earÂly solo works from around the turn of the twenÂtiÂeth cenÂtuÂry, like his priÂvate home and stuÂdio and the UniÂty TemÂple, both in Oak Park, IlliÂnois, become sites of pilÂgrimÂage. By 1935, howÂevÂer, Wright’s name had long since been interÂnaÂtionÂalÂly made — and unmade.
ForÂtuÂnateÂly for him, that was the year he designed the Edgar J. KaufÂmann Sr. House, betÂter known as FallingÂwaÂter, which is now wideÂly conÂsidÂered his masÂterÂpiece. NatÂuÂralÂly, FallingÂwaÂter appears in one of the videos includÂed in the playlist of short docÂuÂmenÂtaries on Wright’s housÂes from ArchiÂtecÂturÂal Digest at the top of the post.
It could hardÂly have been othÂerÂwise; nearÂly as unigÂnorÂable are his AriÂzona home and stuÂdio and his much-filmed Maya revival Ennis House in Los AngeÂles. Through these videos, you can also get tours of his lessÂer-known works like Toy Hill House in PleasÂantville, New York; TirÂranÂna in New Canaan, ConÂnectiÂcut; and the CirÂcuÂlar Sun House in Phoenix, AriÂzona, his final realÂized home design.
For all the varÂied interÂests he purÂsued and influÂences he absorbed, Wright did stick to cerÂtain philoÂsophÂiÂcal prinÂciÂples, some of which ArchiÂtecÂturÂal Digest has traced in its videos. Using three difÂferÂent housÂes, the one just above illuÂmiÂnates perÂhaps Wright’s sinÂgle most imporÂtant guidÂing idea: “A home, he believed, should not be placed upon the land, but grow from it, natÂurÂal, intenÂtionÂal, and insepÂaÂraÂble from the enviÂronÂment around it.” As his archiÂtecÂture evolved, he increasÂingÂly “treatÂed the landÂscape not as a backÂdrop, but as a colÂlabÂoÂraÂtor,” creÂatÂing “spaces that invite the outÂside in and express the essenÂtial prinÂciÂples of organÂic archiÂtecÂture.” Wright’s housÂes can thus be stunÂning in a way we might’ve only thought posÂsiÂble in a natÂurÂal landÂscape — and, as genÂerÂaÂtions of buyÂers have found out by now, just as unruly and demandÂing as any pureÂly organÂic culÂtiÂvaÂtion.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Frank Lloyd Wright: America’s GreatÂest ArchiÂtect? — A Free StreamÂing DocÂuÂmenÂtary
What Frank Lloyd Wright’s UnusuÂal WinÂdows Tell Us About His ArchiÂtecÂturÂal Genius
That Far CorÂner: Frank Lloyd Wright in Los AngeÂles — A Free Online DocÂuÂmenÂtary
Frank Lloyd Wright Designs an Urban Utopia: See His Hand-Drawn SketchÂes of BroadÂacre City (1932)
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.