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Southern Illinois University Press

Treasures of Taliesin: Seventy-Six Unbuilt Designs

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Title: Treasures of Taliesin: Seventy-Six Unbuilt Designs
Author: Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer
ISBN: 0809312352
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Published: 1985
Binding: Hardcover
Language: English
Condition: Used: Very Good
Clean, unmarked copy with some edge wear. Good binding. Dust jacket included if issued with one. We ship in recyclable American-made mailers. 100% money-back guarantee on all orders.

Architecture & Design 1653904

Publisher Description:

Frank Lloyd Wright believed that his un­built designs were the most interesting of his works. Here are 106 color plates of his drawings for 76 unexecuted designs. Twenty-nine of the drawings have never been published.

Pfeiffer has created a visual history of the development of Wright's work that extends in time from 1895 to 1959and in architectural interest from his admonition to Franklin Watkins to "use cad­mium plated screws with an electrical screwdriver" to secure the cypress siding of his studio-residence to a description of the 26-foot drawing for The Mile High Building that was exhibited on Septem­ber 17, 1956.

Wright argued then that "This is the future of the tall building in the Ameri­can city. Level Manhattan to one large green, like Central Park, and erect a few of these well spaced apart and you have the congregation desired by city work and city life, but surrounded with trees, fields, parks and streams."

Pfeiffer draws on his long association with Wright to describe the circum­stances surrounding the germination of each project, characterize the person­alities involved, and explain what went wrong and why. The stories include po­litical intrigue and assassination, as well as intimate glimpses of personalities such as Mike Todd and Ayn Rand, and a poignant recollection of Marilyn Mon­roe, who wanted an entire floor of her planned home with Arthur Miller for their children. There is even a residence for a mysterious client whose identity was known only by Wright.