Wright’s Birthday: Wright in the Abstract

Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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It is June 8, Frank Lloyd Wright’s 157th birthday. Social media sites devoted to Wright are abuzz every year with birthday tributes. Sometimes I have something to post on “the day,” but not always. (June 8, 1968 or 6.8.68, my high school graduation day, is more significant to me personally, but that’s another story). I had nothing in mind to post this year until I took my customary morning bike ride and passed his Thomas P. Hardy House and the SC Johnson Administration Building and Research Tower which are on my bike route in Racine. I thought back to the fall of 2022 when my alma mater, Lake Forest (Illinois) College, honored me with a 50th anniversary Homecoming dual photo exhibit. One gallery was devoted to my career as a photojournalist, the other to my Wright-related photography. As I pedaled down Main Street this morning I decided to share the latter with you. The thesis of the exhibit was to present “Wright in the Abstract,” rather than only in record shots or head-on photos of his work. My challenge was to cull a few dozen photos of several thousand. The photos are in chronological order, based on the year of the commission, not the year of completion.

Romeo and Juliet Windmill, Spring Green (originally 1896, rebuilt 1938 and 1992):

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Thomas P. Hardy House, Racine (1904-1905):

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Meyer May House, Grand Rapids (1908):

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Hollyhock House, Los Angeles (1917):

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Taliesin III, Spring Green (1925):

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Tour guests in Wright’s bedroom at Taliesin III:

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Hillside Drafting Room, Spring Green (1932):

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SC Johnson Administration Building (1936) and Research Tower (1943-1944):

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Herbert F. Johnson Jr. Home (Wingspread), Wind Point (1937):

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Florida Southern College, Lakeland (Beginning in 1938):

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SC Johnson Research Tower, Racine (1943-44):

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Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (1943):

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Price Tower, Bartlesville (1952):

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Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa (1956):

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Lindholm Service Station, Cloquet, Minnesota (1957):

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Marin County, California, Civic Center (1957):

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I will close with a photo I took just a few weeks ago when I was given the opportunity to preview the newly-restored Hillside Theater (1952), which is being inaugurated this evening, literally just as I am putting this piece together:

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People have often asked me what attracts me to Wright’s work. As a photographer, I have a visual attraction to his work. That grew in part out of my newspaper photo assignments at the SC Johnson Administration Building. But beyond that, as I began to study his work, I was struck by the evolution of his designs from the 1890s until his death in 1959. Happy birthday, Frank Lloyd Wright, and thank you for your contributions to helping us reimagine the spaces in which we live, work, and worship.

Please scroll down in http://www.wrightinracine.com for previous posts

 

Raising the Curtain on Hillside Theater Restoration

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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The public celebration of the restoration of Hillside Theater at Taliesin will be June 8, Frank Lloyd Wright’s 157th birthday. The event is sponsored by the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation and Taliesin Preservation, following the multi-year, $867,000 project. Funding was made possible by a Save America’s Treasures grant from the National Park Service and matching funds raised from corporations and donors. According to Taliesin Preservation, “preservation was divided into three phases: elimination of water infiltration, rehabilitation of the basement, and restoration of the Hillside Theater.”

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I had the opportunity to photograph the theater in mid May. Let’s open the doors to the theater and take a look.

 

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Our first impression, of course, is of “compression…”

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…and then, “release…”

LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 009.jpgMr. and Mrs. Wright and their guests sat in the seats to the right.

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LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 030.jpgFrom Wright’s “An Autobiography:” When I was a small child I used to lie awake listening to the strains of the Sonata Pathetique—Father playing it on the Steinway square downstairs in the Baptist minister’s house at Weymouth. It takes me back to boyhood again when I hear it now.” [FLLW: Collected Writings, v. 4, p. 147.]

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LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 005.jpgThe Buddha statues will be put back in their original places flanking the stage.

Acknowledgements: Thank you to Taliesin Preservation for facilitating my access to the theater, and to Taliesin historian Keiran Murphy for her explanation of the wood panel with the score from “Pathetique.”

Links:

Taliesin Preservation on the theater restoration:

https://www.taliesinpreservation.org/hillside-theater-preservation/

Keiran Murphy’s website:

https://www.keiranmurphy.com

Please continue to scroll down for previous articles on http://www.wrightinracine.com

 

Wright Through My Lens

All photos © Mark Hertzberg (2021)

I had not been to many Frank Lloyd Wright sites outside of Racine in more than two years until a week ago. I had a gracious lunch invitation from Minerva Montooth for Sunday, and a last-minute photo assignment in Sparta, Wisconsin (west of Spring Green) Saturday, so I overnighted in Spring Green. I have always enjoyed challenging myself to see new things at familiar Wright sites on return visits. These are some of the many fruits of last week’s visit.

I photographed at the famous cantilevered Birdwalk terrace from below:

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I noticed visitors taking pictures above me while photographing the Birdwalk:

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I do not plan my photo visits for a particular time of day / lighting…I shoot what is there when I am there. I explored Taliesin and the grounds of the newly-restored Wyoming Valley School Cultural Arts Center in wonderful evening light Saturday, before dinner with Keiran Murphy and “Mr. Keiran.” I visited both again in Sunday’s morning light. I saw the familiar sign for Taliesin in a different way, thanks to the sharp angle of the morning light:

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The first thing I saw at Taliesin Saturday as I drove onto the grounds was the corn crib, dramatically lit by evening light:

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Sunday morning I saw something different with a long lens as I drove up:

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I used a powerful zoom lens to photograph Romeo and Juliet and Tan-y-deri from a distance both days:

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I continued to explore with the long lens:

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I sat on the floor to photograph through one of the fireplaces inside Taliesin:

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I explored Wright’s office – with its own cantilevered balcony – and the original drafting room:

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I photographed Taliesin itself with long and short lenses:

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Going to Taliesin means also exploring Hillside Theatre and the drafting room. The theatre is currently being restored.

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After photographing the ghost-like seats with the sheets covering them I looked for photos under the seats:

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I also looked up:

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Outside is a view of the theatre and nearby farm:

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Then I went to explore the silent drafting room, first reflected in the theatre’s windows:

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And, Hillside itself:

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I photographed Midway Barn from the road, on my trips between Taliesin and Wyoming Valley School and once from Hillside:

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The last set of photos is of the Wyoming Valley School, now known as the Wyoming Valley School Cultural Arts Center. One of the only upsides of the pandemic is that the restoration of the school was able to proceed without having to work around visitors. Many of the changes are structural and not visible. Perhaps the most visible change is that the bricks inside now approximate their original natural color…the yellow of recent years was painted over with a grayish tone.

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The desks in the classroom today are not original, but I enjoyed photographing them through the mitered glass in the evening light nonetheless. This historic black and white photo shows the original desks.

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Robert Hartmann’s wonderful 1960s black and white photos of Taliesin and the school still hang on the walls. His photos documenting the construction of Riverview Terrace are in the rear of the dining room at the Visitors Center.

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I leave you with a photo of the Marvelous Minerva Montooth and my Taliesin selfie. Technical notes: I do no “post processing” on my photos…I do not sharpen them or increase the color saturation. What I shoot is what I get. I sometimes open the midtones a bit and do a bit of dodging and burning in…nothing that could not be done in a traditional chemical darkroom. I use two camera bodies, one has a DX or crop frame sensor, the other is FX or full frame (equivalent to what would be recorded on a 35mm piece of film). The lenses used are: 14-24mm (used on the FX body); 17-35mm (on the DX body);  a 70-200mm on the FX body, and a 200-500mm, used on both bodies. When the 200-500 is on the DX body, it is approximately the equivalent in 35mm terms of a 350-750mm lens. I thank John Clouse for selling me that lens recently…I had a wonderful time exploring Taliesin and Wyoming Valley School with it!

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A Fall Afternoon at Taliesin

All photos (c) Mark Hertzberg 2018

Wednesday, October 10, 2018…the light and fall colors were magical after a morning of rain.Romeo and Juliet 2018 .jpgRomeo and Juliet Windmill

Midway.jpgMidway Barn, viewed from in front of Hillside Home and School

Taliesin fall 4.jpgThis and following photos: Taliesin III

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Unity Chapel viewed from Taliesin:

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A “selfie” at Hillside Theater:

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