subject: Taliesin: Frank Lloyd Wright's Ideal World [print this page] Taliesin: Frank Lloyd Wright's Ideal World
Taliesin was built and rebuilt three times from 1910 to 1959. And for Frank Lloyd Wright, it was his experimental laboratory.
Taliesin hugs the hillside over a peaceful valley near Spring Green, Wisconsin. Through its horizontal windows, you can glimpse the rolling landscape, the Wisconsin River, and the mid-western sky. Because Taliesin was Wright's laboratory, many elements are not finished. In fact, the crudeness of some of it is quite shocking.
I visited Taliesin in early March 2011. The hill was covered in snow and icicles hung from the eaves. Although the home and studio were empty, I sensed the incredible vigor of Frank Lloyd Wright, the extraordinary energy he possessed to create and maintain so far-reaching an endeavor on a lonely mid-western hillside.
The spaces inside the building are like no other. Wright located cave-like hearths beneath billowing tents of roof forms. Spaces merge into adjacent spaces in a progression that you simply don't want to come to an end.
Wright often talked about his architecture as though it was a type of weaving, and at Taliesin you see stone, wood plaster and glass woven together and washed in sunlight. He loved Beethoven more than any artist and there is music in Wright's architecture.
I saw the Wisconsin hills through his living room window and realized that the living room roof soaring above me was the exact twin of the hills beyond.
Years ago, one of Wright's clients, Stanley Rosenbaum, told me that visiting Taliesin was like going into a dream world. Standing in the studio overlooking the river, I understood his description: This was Wright's ideal world, and he was the magician who brought it into being.
To learn more about Taliesin Preservation, Inc., visit www.taliensinpreservation.org.
About Taliesin (from www.taliesinpreservation.org)
Taliesin Preservation, Inc. was created to preserve the buildings, artifacts, landscape, and legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright in Wisconsin.
America's premier architect and Wisconsin's native son considered Spring Green his home, and he built and created an environment both beautiful and inspirational.
In partnership with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, Inc., based in Scottsdale, AZ, it is the mission of Taliesin Preservation, Inc. to conserve the masterful buildings and landscape of the Taliesin Estate, and to educate the public on the man, the architect, the architecture, and the ideas.