Light screens : the leaded glass of Frank Lloyd Wright

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Light screens : the leaded glass of Frank Lloyd Wright

Julie L. Sloan ; with an introduction by David G. de Long

Rizzoli International, 2001

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注記

"This book was published in conjuction with the exhibition Light screens : the leaded glass of Frank Lloyd Wright, organized and circulated by Exhibitions International, New York, in cooperation with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, Scottsdale, Arizona." -- T.p. verso

Exhibition venues: American Craft Museum, New York, May 10 - Sept. 2, 2001, Grand Rapids Art Museum, Grand Rapids, Mich., Oct. 12, 2001 - Jan. 6, 2002, Allentown Art Museum, Allentown, Pa., Feb. 21 - Apr. 28, 2002, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Ga., June. 8 - Sept. 1, 2002, Orange County Art Museum, Newport Beach, Calif., Oct. 5, 2002 - Jan. 5, 2003, Renwick Gallely, Smithsonian Institution, Washington,D.C., Mar. 14 - July. 20, 2003

Bibliography: p. 156-158

内容説明・目次

内容説明

With inexhaustible creativity, Frank Lloyd Wright designed an estimated 4,365 windows for over 160 of his buildings. With this boldly abstract glass, he distanced himself from his contemporaries Louis Comfort Tiffany and John La Farge and invented a fully modern language for ornamental design. Author Julie Sloan identifies three phases in Wright's evolution toward this exciting idiom. For his earliest windows, of 1885-1898, the master conceived curvilinear Queen Anne-style motifs. In his famed Prairie-period homes of 1900-1910, he placed lambent glass of autumnal palette and complex patterns of chevrons and rectangles. Finally, vanguard European art and architecture helped inspire his most joyous and inventive light screens. In his work of 1911-1923, Wright liberated ornament with his dancing triangles, primary colors, and exuberant asymmetries. In the same years, his windows expanded from the single opening to the casement, the clerestory, and the skylight. These forms and patterns were essential to Wright's revolutionary vision, for they served his unique conception of fluid interior spaces in dynamic dialogue with exterior views. Including illustrations made especially for this book, Sloan shows how Wright, in her words, expanded the frontiers of stained glass in both its use and its design. "Light Screens" also uncovers the influences on Wright's ornament-- from "Japonisme" to Friedrich Froebel's educational exercises-- and presents invaluable insights on period terms for Wright's glass, on his writings about it, on how glass was made in his time, and on claims for his assistants' authorship of certain designs. A concluding chapter, "Beyond Leaded Glass, 1923-1959," surveysthis great architect's lifelong fascination with glazing and his continued exploration of the latest technologies. A companion to this catalogue is Julie L. Sloan, "Light Screens: The Complete Leaded-Glass Windows of Frank Lloyd Wright." With over 400 illustrations, that volume is the largest gathering of Wright's windows ever published and the first to survey this oeuvre within his architecture.

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