Style: RetroFuturism • Guidance Scale: 9.4 • Complexity: 70 •
More than half of Frank Lloyd Wright's architectural designs were unrealized, but a Spanish architect is using computer modeling to show how some of those projects might have turned out.
With the help of a vast array of software, Spanish architect David Romero has digitally recreated a series of iconic works by Frank Lloyd Wright, two...
Frank Lloyd Wright's signature style and ongoing influence have long inspired architecture around the globe, and continues to today. In the current issue of the Frank Lloyd Wright Quarterly magazine, "UNESCO World Heritage: The 20th Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright," Foundation President & CEO, Stuart Graff, shares more about this influence.
Image 15 of 29 from gallery of See Frank Lloyd Wright’s Missing Works Recreated in Photorealistic Renders. Rose Pauson House (1939-1943). Image © David Romero
Printed on 310gsm Giclée Hahnemühle German Etching 30x45 cm (12x18 inches) is a limited edition of 100 40x60 cm (16x24 inches) is a limited edition of 50 50x75 cm (20x30 inches) is a limited edition of 25 For all limited editions a certificate of authenticity is included
Printed on 310gsm Giclée Hahnemühle German Etching 30x45 cm (12x18 inches) is a limited edition of 100 40x60 cm (16x24 inches) is a limited edition of 50 50x75 cm (20x30 inches) is a limited edition of 25 For all limited editions a certificate of authenticity is included
These 12 photos of Domoto's Lurie and Bier houses were taken for Domoto: Visions of Usonia, a new exhibit at SUNY Purchase's Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery.
Image 21 of 29 from gallery of See Frank Lloyd Wright’s Missing Works Recreated in Photorealistic Renders. Rose Pauson House (1939-1943). Image © David Romero
When you ask an architect about Frank Lloyd Wright, one of the first words out of their mouth will, without fail, be mention of Fallingwater
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT, SC Johnson Wax Complex and Research Tower, Racine Wisconsins, 1936 - 1939
A classic ceramic tile rendering based on one of a pair of art glass skylights at the entrance of Frank Lloyd Wright's Oak Park studio created in 1897. The tile measures 4" x 8" and is shipped in a substantial 2" frame of dark craftsman oak, resulting in an 8" x 12" artwork ready to hang. Interpreted in the ceramic and glaze medium by the Nawal Motawi studio in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Explore rod scott's 544 photos on Flickr!
Considered Wright's final residential masterpiece and a "test run" for his Guggenheim design, the home was originally listed for $12.95 million in 2018.
Three unbuilt projects by Frank Lloyd Wright have been recreated in 3D renderings by Spanish architect David Romero. Images of the high-rise schemes, located in Chicago and Washington D.C., have been published in the latest edition of the Frank Lloyd Wright Quarterly, a hard-copy magazine of the...
Image 4 of 9 from gallery of Wright & Wright's Lambeth Palace Library Consolidates Europe's Second Most Renowned Archive. Photograph by Wright & Wright Architects
Tour eight Frank Lloyd Wright homes not usually open to the public during this weekend's Wright Plus 2012. The tours focus on the architect's famous buildings, including his home and studio, Unity Temple, and the Robie House.
When a building is lost to history, we are often forced to rely on blueprints and faded black-and-white photographs to piece together its appearance. But thanks to architect David Romero, a set of vanished buildings by starchitect Frank Lloyd Wright can be seen in full color and detail for the first time since their destruction. Romero has
Latest Issue of The Frank Lloyd Wright Quarterly Features an Inside Look at Three Sky-High City Structures with Photorealistic Renderings by Spanish Architect David Romero
Three unbuilt projects by Frank Lloyd Wright have been recreated in 3D renderings by Spanish architect David Romero. Images of the high-rise schemes, located in Chicago and Washington D.C., have been published in the latest edition of the Frank Lloyd Wright Quarterly, a hard-copy magazine of the...
Melvyn Maxwell and Sara Stein Smith dreamed of living in a Frank Lloyd Wright house. Here’s how they made it happen on a modest teacher’s salary. By Susan Peck Photography by Brett Mountain If you keep on believing, the dream you wish will come true. If that sounds like a line from a fairy tale, it is. It was also the philosophy that helped Melvyn Maxwell and Sara Stein Smith build their historic Frank Lloyd Wright house in Bloomfield Hills in 1949. The dream began for Melvyn Maxwell (known as Smithy) in 1939, while teaching at a Detroit public school. Mesmerized by a slide presentation of Wright’s Fallingwater house in Pennsylvania, he made a grandiose vow to his fiance, Sara — also a teacher with a modest salary — “One day we will own a home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.” According to an excerpt from “Frank Lloyd Wright Remembered,” after a chance meeting with Wright at his home, Taliesin, the Smiths spent hours in the architect’s studio sharing their vision of building one of his homes in Michigan. They wanted it to become a mecca for artists and musicians — hosting small concerts and art exhibitions yearlong. Wright was […]