An authorative study of Frank Lloyd Wright's drawings. 303 conceptual studies, plans, detailed elevations, and published perspectives present the full range of his achievement.
When asked how he could create so many designs, he answered, "I can't get them out fast enough." Frank Lloyd Wright was a man ahead of his time who could barely keep up with his own ideas!
Secrest had unprecedented access to an extensive archive of Wright's letters, photographs, drawings and books. "Secrest's achievement is to etch Wright's character in sharp relief. . . . (She) presents Wright in his every guise".
The Frank Lloyd Wright Field Guide provides the first complete visitors' guide to all of Wright's buildings in the United States and around the world. This new, single-volume edition is...
An unprecedented look at Frank Lloyd Wright's storied relationship with San Francisco and the Bay Area, highlighting local masterpieces as well as a remarkable body of unbuilt works
Pulitzer Prize?winning critic Ada Louise Huxtable?s biography of America?s greatest architect Renowned architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable's biography Frank Lloyd Wright looks at the architect and the man, from his tumultuous personal ...
Profiles over one hundred buildings of architect Frank Lloyd Wright, ranging from the Home and Studio built in 1889 to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum built in 1956.
This is the first book devoted to Frank Lloyd Wright's designs for remaking the modern city.
Wright seemed agreeable, but decided later to leave Hall on his own. The unit-system Wright favored in place of fully explicit dimensions confused Hall as much as it did Thumm. Hall wrote Wright on September 12: I had quite a time today ...
Junior Library Guild Selection Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People NSTA/CBC Best STEM Book In this book about Frank Lloyd Wright for kids, young readers will learn all about America's first world-famous architect.
A Way of Life is an extraordinary record of the eighteen months that Lois Gottlieb spent with Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin Fellowship in the late 1940s.