American architect
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External Websites
- Art in Context - Frank Lloyd Wright - Who was Frank Lloyd Wright, the Architect?
- The Art Story - Biography of Frank Lloyd Wright
- UNESCO World Heritage Convention - The 20th-Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright
- Victoria and Albert Museum - Frank Lloyd Wright
- National Geographic - Why Frank Lloyd Wright’s playful architecture fuels creativity
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- Frank Lloyd Wright - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- Frank Lloyd Wright - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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External Websites
- Art in Context - Frank Lloyd Wright - Who was Frank Lloyd Wright, the Architect?
- The Art Story - Biography of Frank Lloyd Wright
- UNESCO World Heritage Convention - The 20th-Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright
- Victoria and Albert Museum - Frank Lloyd Wright
- National Geographic - Why Frank Lloyd Wright’s playful architecture fuels creativity
Britannica Websites
Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
- Frank Lloyd Wright - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- Frank Lloyd Wright - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
Written by
Edgar Kaufmann
Fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: •Article History
Quick Facts
- Original name:
- Frank Wright
- Born:
- June 8, 1867, Richland Center, Wisconsin, U.S.
- Died:
- April 9, 1959, Phoenix, Arizona (aged 91)
- Notable Works:
- Fallingwater
- Guggenheim Museum
- Robie House
- Taliesin and Taliesin West
- Movement / Style:
- International Style
- New Brutalism
- Prairie style
- organic architecture
- Subjects Of Study:
- organic architecture
- architecture
See all related content →
Top Questions
What was Frank Lloyd Wright’s early life like?
What was Frank Lloyd Wright’s early life like?
As an infant, Frank Lloyd Wright moved to Iowa in 1869 with his family before living in Rhode Island and Massachusetts and eventually moving back to his mother’s home state of Wisconsin. He attended the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1885–86, but as there were no architecture courses, he took engineering courses.
What is Frank Lloyd Wright best known for?
What is Frank Lloyd Wright best known for?
Frank Lloyd Wright was a great originator and a highly productive architect. He designed some 800 buildings, of which 380 were actually built. UNESCO designated eight of them—including Fallingwater, the Guggenheim Museum, and Unity Temple—as World Heritage sites in 2019. He is known as chief practitioner of the Prairie school of architecture.
How did Frank Lloyd Wright become famous?
How did Frank Lloyd Wright become famous?
Frank Lloyd Wright became famous as the creator and expounder of “organic architecture”—his phrase indicating buildings that harmonize with their inhabitants and their environment. The boldness and fertility of his invention and his command of space are probably his greatest achievements. Throughout his career, Wright emphasized ornamental detail, earthy colours, and rich textural effects.
News •
Owner of Frank Lloyd Wright Skyscraper Sues Preservation Group• Oct. 22, 2024, 11:32 AM ET (New York Times)
The Plan to Save Frank Lloyd Wright’s Only Skyscraper Isn’t Going as Planned• Sep. 30, 2024, 12:44 AM ET (New York Times)
Frank Lloyd Wright (born June 8, 1867, Richland Center, Wisconsin, U.S.—died April 9, 1959, Phoenix, Arizona) was an architect and writer, an abundantly creative master of American architecture. His “Prairie style” became the basis of 20th-century residential design in the United States.
Early life
Wright’s mother, Anna Lloyd-Jones, was a schoolteacher, aged 24, when she married a widower, William C. Wright, an itinerant 41-year-old musician and preacher. (There is uncertainty over whether Frank was given the middle name Lincoln at birth. However, he later adopted Lloyd as his middle name.) The Wrights moved with their infant son to Iowa in 1869 and then lived successively in Rhode Island and Weymouth, Massachusetts, before eventually moving back to Wright’s mother’s home state of Wisconsin. The young Wright attended the University of Wisconsin at Madison for a few terms in 1885–86 as a special student, but as there was no instruction in architecture, he took engineering courses. In order to supplement the family income, Wright worked for the dean of engineering, but he did not like his situation nor the commonplace architecture around him. He dreamed of Chicago, where great buildings of unprecedented structural ingenuity were rising.
The early Chicago years
Wright left Madison early in 1887 for Chicago, where he found employment with J.L. Silsbee, doing architectural detailing. Silsbee, a magnificent sketcher, inspired Wright to achieve a mastery of ductile line and telling accent. In time Wright found more rewarding work in the important architectural firm of Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan. Wright soon became chief assistant to Sullivan, and in June 1889 he married Catherine Tobin. He worked under Sullivan until 1893, at which time he opened his own architectural practice. His family grew to six children, while his firm grew until as many as 10 assistants were employed.
The first work from the new office, a house for W.H. Winslow, was sensational and skillful enough to attract the attention of the most influential architect in Chicago, Daniel Burnham, who offered to subsidize Wright for several years if Wright would study in Europe to become the principal designer in Burnham’s firm. It was a solid compliment, but Wright refused, and this difficult decision strengthened his determination to search for a new and appropriate Midwestern architecture.
Other young architects were searching in the same way; this trend became known as the “Prairie school” of architecture. By 1900 Prairie architecture was mature, and Frank Lloyd Wright, 33 years old and mainly self-taught, was its chief practitioner. The Prairie school was soon widely recognized for its radical approach to building modern homes. Utilizing mass-produced materials and equipment, mostly developed for commercial buildings, the Prairie architects discarded elaborate compartmentalization and detailing for bold, plain walls, roomy family living areas, and perimeter heating below broad glazed areas. Comfort, convenience, and spaciousness were economically achieved. Wright alone built about 50 Prairie houses from 1900 to 1910. The typical Wright-designed residence from this period displayed a wide, low roof over continuous window bands that turned corners, defying the conventional boxlike structure of most houses, and the house’s main rooms flowed together in an uninterrupted space.
Britannica QuizQuick Quiz: Can You Match This Frank Lloyd Wright Design To Its Description?During this period Wright lectured repeatedly; his most famous talk, The Art and Craft of the Machine, was first printed in 1901. His works were featured in local exhibitions from 1894 through 1902. In that year he built the home of the W.W. Willitses, the first masterwork of the Prairie school. In 1905 he traveled to Japan.
By now Wright’s practice encompassed apartment houses, group dwellings, and recreation centres. Most remarkable were his works for business and church. The administrative block for the Larkin Company, a mail-order firm in Buffalo, New York, was erected in 1904 (demolished in 1950). Abutting the railways, it was sealed and fireproof, with filtered, conditioned, mechanical ventilation; metal desks, chairs, and files; ample sound-absorbent surfaces; and excellently balanced light, both natural and artificial. Two years later the Unitarian church of Oak Park, Illinois, Unity Temple, was under way; in 1971 it was registered as a national historic landmark. Built on a minimal budget, the small house of worship and attached social centre achieved timeless monumentality. The congregation still meets in the building’s intimate, top-lit cube of space, which is turned inward, away from city noises. The Unity Temple improved on the Larkin Building in the consistency of its structure (it was built of concrete, with massive walls and reinforced roof) and in the ingenious interior ornament that emphasized space while subordinating mass. Unlike many contemporary architects, Wright took advantage of ornament to define scale and accentuation.
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