Tracing Frank Lloyd Wrightâs Influence
Over his 70-year career, Frank Lloyd Wright designed more than 1,000 structuresâmuseums, homes, churches, commercial buildingsâ532 of which were built. But thanks to his ideas (and his fame) his influence maps far beyond his work. From the 1930s onward, to be inspired by Wright could mean working alongside him as an apprentice or fellow at his home, studio, and architectural school Taliesin in Spring Green, Wisconsin, and later Taliesin West in Scottsdale, Arizonaâlike E. Fay Jones, one of Wrightâs esteemed protégés. It could also mean admiring Wrightâs ideas from afar. One of the best examples of this is Joseph Eichler, who in the early â40s rented a Usonian-style house designed by Wright in Hillsborough, California, and was so inspired by its long, horizontal lines and walls of windows that he developed his Eichler homes with similar modernist principles.
Wrightâs influence reached other architects from his generation and later ones, too. He popularized the term organic architecture, referring to the philosophy of designing in harmony with natural surroundings, and was among the group of Chicago-area architects to introduce Prairie style as an extension of the early-20th-century Arts and Crafts movement. Unsurprisingly, many of Wrightâs actual descendants also pursued careers in architecture: His son, Frank Lloyd Wright Jr., also known as Lloyd Wright, became a landscape architect and designed a number of Southern California homes and landmarks. Meanwhile, Lloyd Wrightâs son, Eric Lloyd Wright, also went on to become an architect and spent much of his career restoring his fatherâs and grandfatherâs buildings.
But the web of Wrightâs architectural influence doesnât stop there: Here are nine architects whose works were touched by Wrightâs ideas, whether directly or from a distance. Wright treated his residential projects as testing grounds for his evolving visions; unsurprisingly, his impact on future generations of architects shines in the homes they designed.
Rudolph Schindlerâs textile block details
Austrian-born architect Rudolph Schindler (1887-1953) designed and built his most important works in Southern California during the first half of the 20th century. He relocated to Los Angeles in 1920 at the request of Wright, whoâd hired him at Taliesin a few years prior, to supervise the construction of Wrightâs Mayan Revival Hollyhock House, which in 2019 became L.A.âs first UNESCO World Heritage Site (and is open for tours in East Hollywood). He also designed two apartments for Wrightâs Samuel Freeman House in the Hollywood Hills. Schindler decided to stay in L.A. and open his own practice; in the â30s, he designed the Greek village-inspired Bubeshko Apartments in the Silver Lake area, which have decorative wall caps that resemble Wrightâs iconic textile blocks from both aforementioned projects.
Richard Neutraâs approach to connection with nature
Richard Neutra (1892-1970) is also known for his 20th-century Southern California modernist designs, like fellow Austrian émigré and Taliesin apprentice Schindler. Among Neutraâs most famous works is the 1946 Kaufmann House in Palm Springs, designed for the same (eponymous) client who commissioned Wright a decade prior for Fallingwater in rural Pennsylvania. Over his career, Neutra developed his own concept for a design approach based on a connection between humans and nature, coining the term "biorealism." Neutraâs principles of biorealism are evident in the â50s wooden, rectangular Goodman House in San Bernardino, California, which he designed with clerestories at the bottom of a glass wall and mitered corner windows, similar to features of Wrightâs Usonians.
Bruce Goffâs early Wright mentorship
The iconoclastic architectural footprint of Bruce Goff (1904-1982) is most predominant in Oklahoma and across the Midwest, where his family moved around during his childhood. At age 12, Goff apprenticed at a Tulsa architecture firm and started correspondence with a much-older Wright and Wrightâs own mentor, architect Louis Sullivan. Over the course of their long, complicated friendship, Goff developed his own highly imaginative style, but was also inspired by Wright and Sullivanâs ideas about organic architecture and modernism. Some of Goffâs earliest (albeit more traditional) buildings are still standing in Tulsa, including the Art Deco Boston Avenue Methodist Church, as well as the McGregor House, one of Goffâs first-known designs (created while he was still in high school), which is now listed on the National Register of Historic Placesâand on VRBO as a rental. The home evokes Wrightâs wide, Prairie-style overhangs, along with a tiered roof.
John Lautnerâs embrace of organic architecture
Inspired by Wrightâs 1932 autobiography, John Lautner (1911-1994) applied to the Taliesin Fellowship in Wisconsin and apprenticed to Wright throughout the mid-â30s. He oversaw the construction of Wrightâs Prairie-style Wingspread in Wisconsin, the Mayan Revival Ennis House in L.A., and the Abby Longyear Roberts House, a lesser-known Wright project actually commissioned by Lautnerâs mother-in-law near where he grew up in Michiganâs Upper Peninsula. Though Lautner is known for his Southern California residential designs and his seminal contributions to Googie architecture, he shared Wrightâs passion for organic architecture. His â60s Sheats-Goldstein Residence in L.A.âs Beverly Crest neighborhood, for example, uses skylights, walls of windows, exterior covered pathways, and an open plan to blend the interior spaces with the outdoors.
William Wesley Peters: protégé and son-in-law
One of the first Taliesin apprentices, William Wesley Peters (1912-1991) left the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to work under Wright in 1932. A few years later, he also became Wrightâs son-in-lawâhe married the architectâs stepdaughter, Svetlana, who later died in a car accidentâand assisted Wright on many projects throughout his career. Upon Wrightâs death in 1959, Peters found his own beat as chairman of Taliesin Associated Architects, the firm established by four of Wrightâs apprentices to carry on his architectural vision. Not far from Taliesin, Petersâs saucer-shaped Bank of Spring Green has nods to similar lines seen in Wrightâs Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Milwaukee and the David and Gladys Wright House in Phoenix, which Wright built in 1952 for the namesake residents, his son and daughter-in-law.
Edgar Tafelâs structural touches
Edgar Tafel (1912-2011) spent most of the â30s at Taliesin, working with Wright on Fallingwater and Wingspread, as well as the SC Johnson headquarters in Racine, Wisconsin. In the early â40s, he established his own practice in New York City and designed many projects there, including two churches in Greenwich Village, where he was a longtime resident. A weekend house Tafel designed for his parents in 1946 in Croton-on-Hudson, located an hour north of Manhattan, features a carport, built-ins lining the bedroom wingâs hallway, and cypress walls throughoutâall clear nods to Wright.
Joseph Eichlerâs modernist tract houses
While neither Joseph Eichler (1900-1974) nor Claude Oakland (1919-1989) were direct apprentices of Wright, both the real estate developer and his most prolific architect were deeply influenced by Wrightâs approaches. Eichlerâs experience living in Wrightâs Sidney Bazett House during his early days as a developer coaxed him to employ similar natural light and space-saving storage tactics, like walls of windows and atriums and tucked-away built-ins, in his own trademark tract houses. Many of the nearly 11,000 Eichlers built between the late-â40s and mid-â60s were designed by Oakland.
Paolo Soleriâs utopian visions
Italian-American architect Paolo Soleri (1919-2013) worked with Wright as a Taliesin West fellow in the late â40s. From the mid-â50s to the late â60s, Soleri built his own home and workshopâwith the help of his own volunteer apprenticesâjust down the road in Arizonaâs Paradise Valley and called it Cosanti, which blends the Italian words "cosa" and "anti," meaning "against things." In the â70s, some 60 miles north of Wrightâs architecture school, Soleri tested his progressive urban planning ideals at Arcosanti, an experimental community designed according to his concept of "arcology," which bridged architecture and ecology (not unlike Wrightâs organic architecture). Soleri and Wright had very different visions for American utopias; Wrightâs Broadacre City concept sought to decentralize urban areas in favor of more sprawling setups, while Soleri envisioned a densely built, communally-oriented environment. Still, his 1949 Dome House in Cave Creek, Arizona, designed with another Wright apprentice, Mark Mills, has many references to Wrightâs architectural style, among them banquette seating and floating stairs.
John Rattenbury’s desert designs
John Rattenbury (1928-2021) helped cofound Taliesin Associated Architects after Wright’s death. But the Canadian architect was first inspired by Wright after reading a 1948 issue of Architecture Forum; in 1950, he applied to the fellowship and was accepted, working alongside Wright at Taliesin West until his mentor’s passing. A nearby Phoenix home by Rattenbury is a study in geometry based on one of Wright’s concepts. It draws clear nods to Wright’s final residential design: the Norman Lykes House, with its stainless-steel kitchen counters and cylindrical living rooms, which Rattenbury completed for Wright the same year, in 1967. In New Jersey, the Rattenbury-designed Kessler House also evokes some Wright signatures; the owners actually commissioned Rattenbury because they admired Wright’s Fallingwater and wanted a home with a similar feel.
Top Image (from left): Photo of Taliesin West by DeAgostini/Getty Images; photo of Fallingwater courtesy the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy; photo of Richard Neutra’s Kaufmann House by Slim Aarons/Getty Images
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