The Triumph of Frank Lloyd Wright
The Guggenheim Museum, turning 50 this year, showcases the trailblazer's mission to elevate American society through architecture
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
In the long negotiations over costs and safety-code stipulations that protracted the construction of the museum, Wright was forced to compromise. "Architecture, may it please the court, is the welding of imagination and common sense into a restraint upon specialists, codes and fools," he wrote in a draft cover letter for an application to the Board of Standards and Appeals. (At the urging of Harry Guggenheim, he omitted the word "fools.") One sacrificed feature was an unconventional glass elevator that would have whisked visitors to the summit, from which they would then descend on foot. Instead, the museum has had to get by with a prosaic elevator far too small to cope with the attending crowds; as a result, most visitors survey an exhibition while ascending the ramp. Curators typically arrange their shows with that in mind. "You cannot get enough people into that tiny elevator," says David van der Leer, an assistant curator of architecture and design, who worked on the Wright exhibition. "The building is so much more heavily trafficked these days that you would need an elevator in the central void to do that."
Installation of the Wright retrospective brought into high relief the discrepancies between the building's symbolic power and its functional capabilities. For instance, to display Wright's drawings—an unparalleled assortment, which for conservation reasons will not be on view again for at least a decade—the curators placed a mesh fabric "shower cap" on the overhead dome to weaken the light, which otherwise would cause the colors on the paper drawings to fade. "On the one hand, you want to display the building as well as possible, and on the other, you need to show the drawings," van der Leer explains.
The Guggenheim emerged last year from a $28 million, four-year restoration, during which cracks and water damage in the concrete were patched, and the peeling exterior paint (10 to 12 layers' worth) was removed and replaced. Wright buildings are notorious for their maintenance difficulties. During Wright's lifetime, the problems were aggravated by the architect's expressed indifference. One famous story recounts an outraged phone call made by Herbert Johnson, an important Wright client, to report that at a dinner party in his new house, water from a leaky roof was dripping on his head. Wright suggested he move his chair.
Still, when you consider that in many projects the architect designed every element, down to the furniture and light fixtures, his bloopers are understandable. Proudly describing the Larkin Building, Wright said, many years after it opened, "I was a real Leonardo da Vinci when I built that building, everything in it was my invention." Because he was constantly pushing the latest technologies to their utmost, Wright probably resigned himself to the inevitable shortfalls that accompany experimentation. "Wright remained throughout his life the romantic he had been since childhood," historian William Cronon wrote in 1994. "As such, he brought a romantic's vision and a romantic's scale of values to the practical challenges of his life." If the architect seemed not to take the glitches in his built projects too seriously, it may be that his mind was elsewhere. "Every time I go into that building, it is such an uplifting of the human spirit," says Pfeiffer, who probably is the best living guide to Wright's thinking about the Guggenheim. The museum is often said by architectural critics to constitute the apotheosis of Wright's lifelong desire to make space fluid and continuous. But it represents something else as well. By inverting the ziggurat so that the top keeps getting wider, Wright said he was inventing a form of "pure optimism." Even in his 90s, he kept his mind open to expanding possibilities.
Arthur Lubow wrote about the 17th-century Italian sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini in the October 2008 issue.
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Related topics: Frank Lloyd Wright 20th Century Museums
Additional Sources
An Autobiography: Frank Lloyd Wright, Horizon Press, 1932









Comments (10)
Regarding the photograph on page 57 of the June 2009 article about Frank Lloyd Wright; although similar, the two cars are not the Austin Healey 'Bugeye' Sprite. The 'Bugeye' Sprite was produced in England between 1958-1961.
The photo shows Frank sitting in an American made car, produced in Indiana; the Crosley HotShot. Although this model was made from 1949-1952; details suggest that these cars were built in 1949-1950. For additional imformation, please go to the following link: http://crosleyautoclub.com
Posted by Steve Chmelar on January 1,2010 | 09:17 PM
Arthur Lubow, in “The Triumph of Frank Lloyd Wright” (June 2009), mentions, as part of Wright’s ambition to “elevate American society,” his Broadacre City scheme. While Broadacre City remained a dream, Wright was commissioned to design a microcosm of a city, the campus of Florida Southern College in Lakeland, Fla. Thanks to the curators of the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Wright’s campus is on display in the Guggenheim's 50th anniversary exhibition.
Built on a shoestring with the help of student labor from 1939 until his death in 1959, Wright's campus comprises the largest single-site collection of his work in the world. Of the 18 structures designed, 12 were built, including his only planetarium and theatre-in-the-round; a 1.5-mile network of cantilevered esplanades; and an iconic symbol of the fountain of knowledge, a 60-foot-high water dome, which was only fully realized in 2007 when engineering technology and available funding caught up with Wright's vision. Today, the campus is undergoing an ambitious restoration under the leadership of president Dr. Anne Kerr and funded by the Getty Foundation, the State of Florida, private donors, and the Save America's Treasures program.
If the Guggenheim traces its lineage to the 1924 sketch of an unbuilt parking garage, as Lubow suggests, it also owes much to Wright’s grand design for the Florida Southern College library, a multi-tiered, circular reading room enveloped by clerestory windows and an indoor balcony. Of note, the library was completed in 1945, the same year Wright was working on the Guggenheim drawings. Wright’s campus, rising out of the ground in the midst of an orange grove and constructed of native materials — sand, coquina shell, and Florida tidewater cypress — is a masterpiece of organic architecture. In a 1950 speech, he called it “a little green shoot in the realm of the spirit.”
Lee Mayhall, Vice President, College Relations
Florida Southern College
Posted by Lee Mayhall on June 29,2009 | 03:09 PM
As a graduate of Florida Southern College, Lakeland, Fl. I was somewhat disappointed that you did not show nor mention any of Wrights buildings there, such as the Annie Phieffer Chapel. It too was an important era in his life as was his friendship with Ludd M Spivey, the president at the time of the construction. This was done in the early '40's and is such an integral part of Southern's history.
Posted by betty hancock on June 28,2009 | 04:00 PM
During the time Mr. Wright was working on the Guggenheim he was also working on a very little known project that was to become the "Taliesin Ensemble" or the "Taliesin Line". It was to include fabrics and wallpapers by F. Schumacher and Co.,Rugs by Karastan,furniture by Heritage-Henredon,paints by Martin-Senour Co. and accessories (VASES)by Minic. Between the years of 1953-1955 I was the "runner" between my father, Valentine Minnich,president of Minic,and Mr. Wright. I would bring models and drawings based on ideas that Mr. Wright and my father had and how difficult the pieces would be to bring into production. Mr. Wright liked the idea that my father had faith in a 13 year old to speak on behalf of the Minic firm and for two years I visited the second floor of the Plaza Hotel dropping off the latest sketch or model for Mr. Wright's approval.I still have photos of many of the pieces along with my collection. I would be happy to send by e-mail photos of the vases if anyone is interested in seeing them. Yours, William V. Minnich
Posted by William V. Minnich on June 18,2009 | 10:19 PM
I read with excitement Arthur Lubow’s article celebrating the 50th anniversary of Frank Lloyd Wrights’ Guggenheim Museum in New York City. As an art historian turned woodworker, I was delighted to be involved in the restoration of the famed architects’ last prairie house built in Chicago. This was the Emil Bach House, built in 1917. Bought at auction in 2005 the interior, which had been severely altered over the years, was painstakingly restored with the exception of the heating system. For the rooms unfurnished by Wright, the new owner commissioned original works of art which complimented Wright’s unique details. My effort was a desk made of Illinois black walnut and beech (the primary woods of the house) inspired by the Japanese Tansu style. To ‘marry’ the desk to the house I simply lifted the iconography from the house and applied it to the desk. For example, Wright's use of bands of casement windows 'wrapping around the corners' of the house is reflected by the two checked drawer fronts in that the checks 'wrap around the corner' into the drawer sides. Another example of marrying the desk to the house is the caning on the sliding doors which conceal files. The caning connects the desk to the chair, which is a duplicate of a chair from the original dinette set designed by Wright for the Bach house. (Please See Linked Illustrations Enclosed)
http://marcuswoodworking.com/commissions/feerer_bach_house.html
Marcus Collier, Woodworker
www.marcuswoodworking.com
Posted by Marcus Collier on June 18,2009 | 04:20 PM
As is too often the case with artists & those who talk about their work, the central idea is ignored. Your essay on the Guggenheim Museum is a case in point. Wright figured out the best way to design a museum where you walk around looking at objects on the wall & never being sure which way to turn when you enter another room. Hence, you make it easier to walk by having a slight incline down, & in a spiral so you don't have to decide which way to turn. All that talk about ziggurats & symbols & such by Wright & others, may be true, but obscure the central idea. BTW, I've never started visit to the Guggenheim by walking up, but by taking the elevator & walking down. Then I might walk back up.
Posted by John Mood on June 10,2009 | 07:03 PM
I love the Smithsonian Magazine and truly enjoyed the article about FLWright. Question: In San Luis Obispo, CA, there is a small office building that FLW designed. Do you have any info on that?
The article by Patton's grandson was one of the most touching articles! Thanks for that.
Posted by sonja glassmeyer, ed.d on June 4,2009 | 07:25 PM
Frank Lloyd Wright was the greatest architect of the 20th Century. I believe you can include the 19th, 18th & 17th centuries.
Posted by Theo Dimson on June 4,2009 | 05:55 PM
Jon,
Those are two Austin Healey Sprite autos, nicknamed "bug eyed sprites" for obvious reasons. They were designed that way to comply with federal regulations for headlight height.
The cars were produced in the 1960's and perhaps into the 1970's. For more info, check Wikipedia.
Bob
Posted by Robert Krogh on June 4,2009 | 02:32 PM
I was facinated by the two little cars pictured with Lloyd and his wife. Do you have any information on them?
Posted by Jon Hall on May 26,2009 | 11:58 AM