Frank Lloyd Wright Signed, Huge Architectural Plans for
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Frank Lloyd Wright Architectural Plans for His Last Usonian House
Drawing/Rendering of the Duey Wright House, Wausau, Wisconsin, circa 1957. Ink, graphite and colored pencil on paper, 44.5" x 29.5". Plot plan showing an aerial view with elevations. Slight creasing, mostly to the corners, with small edge tear. Signed by the master himself "FLW July 57"
Perched on a bluff top overlooking the Wisconsin River, the Duey Wright House is one of Frank Lloyd Wright's last Usonian residences. Built for Duey and Julia Wright (not related to the architect) who owned a local music store and music school, the home's unusual L-shaped footprint has been suggested to represent a quarter note in honor of the musical couple. Moreover, a repeated geometric design found throughout the home in perforated plywood panels suggests musical notation. Wright used these panels in the exterior windows and as screens between rooms.
The unadorned concrete block walls combine with the wide overhanging eaves to create a low horizontal look to the home. The longest wing, which runs east to west, is principally used for bedrooms, with the carport on the east end and the library on the west end. The two wings are joined on the west end by a large concrete block chimney, which allows for a library fireplace, and another in the living room. The circular living room contains a continuous band of windows allowing for a panoramic view of the Wisconsin River to the southwest, and Rib Mountain in the distance.
The Usonian house — the brainchild of American architect Frank Lloyd Wright — is the embodiment of an idea for a simple, stylish small house of moderate cost designed especially for the American middle class. It is not so much a style as a type of residential architecture. "Style is important," wrote Wright. "A style is not." When looking at a portfolio of Wright's architecture the casual observer might not even pause at Wrights first Usonian house from 1937, looking so familiar and ordinary yet, Usonian architecture was another obsession of the famous Frank Lloyd Wright in the last decades of his long life. By the 1950s, he had designed hundreds of what he was then calling his Usonian Automatics.
Wright didn't want to be known solely as an architect of the rich and famous, although his early residential experimentation in Prairie house design had been subsidized by families of means. The competitive Wright quickly became interested in affordable housing for the masses.
In 1936, when the United States was in the depths of the Great Depression, Wright realized that the nation's housing needs would forever be changed. Most of his clients would lead more simple lives, without household help, but still deserving of sensible, classic design. "It is not only necessary to get rid of all unnecessary complications in construction..." wrote Wright, "it is necessary to consolidate and simplify the three appurtenance systems — heating, lighting, and sanitation." Designed to control costs, Wright's Usonian houses had no attics, no basements, simple roofs, radiant heating (what Wright called "gravity heat"), natural ornamentation, and efficient use of space, inside and out.
Some have said that the word Usonia is an abbreviation for United States of North America. This meaning explains Wright's aspiration to create a democratic, distinctly national style that was affordable for the "common people" of the United States.
Asuperb,impressive architectural drawingof this important housewiththeelevation scales.
This itemcomes witha Certificate from John Reznikoff, apremier authenticator forbothmajor 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.
WE PROVIDE IN-HOUSE SHIPPING WORLDWIDE!
Drawing/Rendering of the Duey Wright House, Wausau, Wisconsin, circa 1957. Ink, graphite and colored pencil on paper, 44.5" x 29.5". Plot plan showing an aerial view with elevations. Slight creasing, mostly to the corners, with small edge tear. Signed by the master himself "FLW July 57"
Perched on a bluff top overlooking the Wisconsin River, the Duey Wright House is one of Frank Lloyd Wright's last Usonian residences. Built for Duey and Julia Wright (not related to the architect) who owned a local music store and music school, the home's unusual L-shaped footprint has been suggested to represent a quarter note in honor of the musical couple. Moreover, a repeated geometric design found throughout the home in perforated plywood panels suggests musical notation. Wright used these panels in the exterior windows and as screens between rooms.
The unadorned concrete block walls combine with the wide overhanging eaves to create a low horizontal look to the home. The longest wing, which runs east to west, is principally used for bedrooms, with the carport on the east end and the library on the west end. The two wings are joined on the west end by a large concrete block chimney, which allows for a library fireplace, and another in the living room. The circular living room contains a continuous band of windows allowing for a panoramic view of the Wisconsin River to the southwest, and Rib Mountain in the distance.
The Usonian house — the brainchild of American architect Frank Lloyd Wright — is the embodiment of an idea for a simple, stylish small house of moderate cost designed especially for the American middle class. It is not so much a style as a type of residential architecture. "Style is important," wrote Wright. "A style is not." When looking at a portfolio of Wright's architecture the casual observer might not even pause at Wrights first Usonian house from 1937, looking so familiar and ordinary yet, Usonian architecture was another obsession of the famous Frank Lloyd Wright in the last decades of his long life. By the 1950s, he had designed hundreds of what he was then calling his Usonian Automatics.
Wright didn't want to be known solely as an architect of the rich and famous, although his early residential experimentation in Prairie house design had been subsidized by families of means. The competitive Wright quickly became interested in affordable housing for the masses.
In 1936, when the United States was in the depths of the Great Depression, Wright realized that the nation's housing needs would forever be changed. Most of his clients would lead more simple lives, without household help, but still deserving of sensible, classic design. "It is not only necessary to get rid of all unnecessary complications in construction..." wrote Wright, "it is necessary to consolidate and simplify the three appurtenance systems — heating, lighting, and sanitation." Designed to control costs, Wright's Usonian houses had no attics, no basements, simple roofs, radiant heating (what Wright called "gravity heat"), natural ornamentation, and efficient use of space, inside and out.
Some have said that the word Usonia is an abbreviation for United States of North America. This meaning explains Wright's aspiration to create a democratic, distinctly national style that was affordable for the "common people" of the United States.
Asuperb,impressive architectural drawingof this important housewiththeelevation scales.
This itemcomes witha Certificate from John Reznikoff, apremier authenticator forbothmajor 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.
WE PROVIDE IN-HOUSE SHIPPING WORLDWIDE!
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Frank Lloyd Wright Signed, Huge Architectural Plans for
Estimate $8,000 - $9,000
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