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Frank Lloyd Wright : The Rooms : Interiors and Decorative Arts / photographs by Alan Weintraub ; text by Margo Stipe ; foreword by David A. Hanks.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: New York : Rizzoli, [2014]Fecha de copyright: ©2014Descripción: 336 páginas : ilustraciones (principalmente color) ; 29 X 29 cmTipo de contenido:
  • texto
  • imagen fija
Tipo de medio:
  • sin mediación
Tipo de soporte:
  • volumen
ISBN:
  • 9780847843428
  • 0847843424
Otro título:
  • Frank Lloyd Wright, the Rooms [Parte del título]
  • Rooms : Interior and Decorative Arts [Parte del título]
Tema(s): Clasificación LoC:
  • NA 737.W7 A4.2014
Contenidos:
An overview of the life and work. Nature as inspiration and muse ; Gesamtkunstwerk: architecture as a complete work of art ; Influences ; Wright's redefinition of space -- Oak Park home and studio -- Prairie houses. Prairie house furnishings ; Art glass ; Prairie-era masterworks ; Susan Lawrence Dana House ; Darwin D. Martin House ; Avery and Queene Coonley House ; Frederick C. Robie House ; Meyer May House -- Decorative interlude. Midway Gardens ; New Imperial Hotel ; Aline Barnsdall House, Hollyhock House ; The textile-block houses ; Mabel and Charles Ennis House ; Harriet and Samuel Freeman House ; John Storer House -- The tumultuous years of eclipse and return, 1922-1940. Edgar and Liliane Kaufmann House, Fallingwater ; Herbert F. Johnson House, Wingspread ; The Usonian house ; Herbert and Katherine Jacobs House ; Variations on the Usonian house -- The celebrated final years, 1945-1959. Benjamin Adelman House ; Gerald Tonkens House ; Theodore and Betty Pappas House ; William Tracy House ; Toufic Kalil House ; Dorothy Turkel House ; William and Mary Palmer House ; David and Gladys Wright House ; The quintessential Usonian, exhibition house -- The architect's homes: Taliesin and Taliesin West.
Resumen: Wright was an early proponent of "total design." Unsatisfied with what was available in designing a given space or home, he invented what was needed, developing a language of architectural detail and styling that is unique and which extended to the tables, bookcases, easy chairs, sofas, and cabinets; to rugs and murals; to stonework; to stained glass "light screens," which served as windows and doors and room partitions; to lighting.
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Existencias
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura topográfica Copia número Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Libros Biblioteca Francisco Xavier Clavigero Acervo Acervo General NA 737.W7 A4.2014 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) ej. 1 Disponible UIA137804

Incluye referencias bibliográficas e índice.

An overview of the life and work. Nature as inspiration and muse ; Gesamtkunstwerk: architecture as a complete work of art ; Influences ; Wright's redefinition of space -- Oak Park home and studio -- Prairie houses. Prairie house furnishings ; Art glass ; Prairie-era masterworks ; Susan Lawrence Dana House ; Darwin D. Martin House ; Avery and Queene Coonley House ; Frederick C. Robie House ; Meyer May House -- Decorative interlude. Midway Gardens ; New Imperial Hotel ; Aline Barnsdall House, Hollyhock House ; The textile-block houses ; Mabel and Charles Ennis House ; Harriet and Samuel Freeman House ; John Storer House -- The tumultuous years of eclipse and return, 1922-1940. Edgar and Liliane Kaufmann House, Fallingwater ; Herbert F. Johnson House, Wingspread ; The Usonian house ; Herbert and Katherine Jacobs House ; Variations on the Usonian house -- The celebrated final years, 1945-1959. Benjamin Adelman House ; Gerald Tonkens House ; Theodore and Betty Pappas House ; William Tracy House ; Toufic Kalil House ; Dorothy Turkel House ; William and Mary Palmer House ; David and Gladys Wright House ; The quintessential Usonian, exhibition house -- The architect's homes: Taliesin and Taliesin West.

Wright was an early proponent of "total design." Unsatisfied with what was available in designing a given space or home, he invented what was needed, developing a language of architectural detail and styling that is unique and which extended to the tables, bookcases, easy chairs, sofas, and cabinets; to rugs and murals; to stonework; to stained glass "light screens," which served as windows and doors and room partitions; to lighting.