| Table by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1917 |  | Table in cherry-wood with glass top
| Product-id.: | FW T/487 s | | Delivery time: |  |
variant not found.
| | | | |
Informationen to Table by Frank Lloyd Wright
Table in cherry-wood with glass top.
Available in two sizes - Please choose your size!
Measurement: L 92 cm, P 92, H 42 cm L 120 cm, P 50, H 42 cm
All prices include shipping charges from Italy to your country. as of orders between 1.500,- and 2.000,- Euro (depending on your country), otherwise, the shipping charge is between 12 and 20 % plus basis charges. - the entire cost of your selection will be indicated after you complete your order.
Italy's Top- brands directly from the manufacturer - Made in Italy
Gallery
Help us to enlarge our/your picture gallery and send us pictures showing your
Bauhaus furnitures, which you bought at our shop.
By publishing of your pictures, you will get a coupon for your next shopping at classic-design24.com
Biography

Frank Lloyd Wright 1867 - 1959
A brilliant psychologist, Frank Lloyd Wright, became the spokesman for American architecture around the world. He understood human needs and administered to them through his work. Above all he sought repose, a restful environment free of tension which catered to the mental health and happiness of the indwellers. Born in Richland Centre, Wisconsin, in 1890, Wright not only influenced this area with his Prairie Style architecture, but expanded to Los Angeles, Phoenix, New York, and eventually beyond the boundaries of the United States. Wright conceived of the interior space in terms of rooms overlapping and interpenetrating--often at the corners. Use areas were defined by screening devices and subtle changes in ceiling heights. For Wright, spaces were defined rather than enclosed, and use was relative to the individual rather than absolute. Until the outbreak of war in 1914, Wright continually evolved the prairie house toward greater abstraction in Oak Park, near Chicago. Roofs and balconies gradually became flat, hovering slabs, and a geometric interplay between verticals and horizontals replaced an emphasis upon wall. Even his non-residential work reflected this development: the Larkin Administration Building and Unity Temple reiterated geometric shapes and the uselessness of a visible roof. In the 1920s in Los Angeles, Wright continued to develop his architectural vocabulary with cast blocks of concrete. Especially of note are the residences known as the Hollyhock House for Adine Barnsdall, the Freeman House, and the Ennis-Brown House in Griffith Park. Each house has its own distinctive signature block design, a natural form reduced to pure geometry. In 1936 he designed and built both Fallingwater in Connecticut and the Johnson Administration building. Near Phoenix, Arizona, he built Taliesin West as a winter retreat. His last project during his long and illustrious life was the Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan. A circular spiral of a building, the Guggenheim became an icon of New York architecture.
| | |