Updates: Tower Tumult; Ann MacGregor

© Mark Hertzberg (2025)

Tower Tumult: On August 14 I posted about the critical situation facing Frank Lloyd Wright’s Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma (I do not know why the URL mentions the unrelated SC Johnson Research Tower). The post includes a variety of photos of Price Tower:

https://wrightinracine.net/tag/sc-johnson-research-tower/

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 002.jpg

On January 16 a judge ordered that utilities (heat) be restored to the building. On January 21 he ordered the sale to a responsible party from Tulsa that is known for their restoration of an historic hotel there. On January 22 the current owners filed for bankruptcy. They have still not turned the utilities back on, and so this saga drags on. The question of Wright artifacts from the building that were given to an auction house in Dallas, in spite of an easement prohibiting that has not been resolved, either. Among the heroes in this story are the staff and legal counsel of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy. Their continuing updates on the story are at:

https://savewright.org/endangered-price-tower-in-bartlesville-oklahoma/

The Building Conservancy is going deep, deep into their funds set aside for legal work as the battle to save the building drags on. Please don’t let the sunset on the building, as I literally did when I took this photograph in 2014. Hint: they would welcome your financial support at:

https://savewright.org/give/

Remembering Ann MacGregor: On November 23 I posted a tribute to the late Ann MacGregor, one of the heroes in Mason City, Iowa’s successful quest to save Wright’s only extant hotel commission, the then-dilapidated Park Inn Hotel and adjoining City National Bank building. The hotel is now a successful boutique hotel:

https://wrightinracine.net/2024/11/23/remembering-ann-macgregor/

LR Pre-dinner 012.jpgAnn MacGregor with Scott Perkins of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, 2012

My tribute to Ann mentioned her long-term correspondence with Marshall Jones, a friend of mine, who is serving two consecutive life terms for homicide in Wisconsin. He became interested in Wright after I interviewed him for a project about the criminal justice system.

LR Marshall Jones Waupun 014.jpg

I wrote Marshall to tell him about Ann’s passing, and sent him a copy of my story. He wrote me back last week (mail to the prison system faces interminable delays while it is sent to a place in Maryland that copies incoming letters and then sends the copies to inmates) with his own tribute to Ann:

“I appreciate you for sending me the news of Ann’s passing. A part of me was deeply saddened, but another part of me was greatly appreciative that I had the privilege of being considered her friend, She was so much more than someone that I corresponded with. She was someone who brought unconditional love, unconditional positive regard, she allowed me to peer into her beautiful family, and she gave me priceless guidance. She didn’t see me by my conviction, nor did she allow me to accept my worst decision as the resounding theme for my life. She was ruthless when it came to goals, and when you said that you wanted to accomplish something, she pressed you until it was done. She was amazingly supportive and she encouraged me with gentleness and love. You knew that Ann had your back. We talked about Mr. Wright, religion (we were both Christians), politics, family, and life. Her disposition increased in positivism even in the face of diminishing health. So, I am grateful for her life, and for her presence in my life. I was so blessed by her, and I am better because of her friendship. It was much deeper than correspondence. With Ann and Bruce (Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer also corresponded with Marshall), I was family. I now carry her with me everywhere I go.”

Well, Marshall, my story was more of the nuts and bolts of her life, as we used to say in the newsroom. You captured her essence. Thank you.

Tower Tumult in Bartlesville

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 001.JPG

The future of Frank Lloyd Wright’s landmark Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma is uncertain. The Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy has initiated legal proceedings against Cynthia Blanchard, the owner of the building, over her sale of Wright artifacts from the building, including one of the office chairs Wright designed, to a mid-century design dealer in Dallas. The Building Conservancy has an easement on the property, which, it says, prohibits the sale of any of the artifacts.

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 022.JPG

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 020.JPG

Wright designed the tower in 1952 as a combination office and apartment building, and it opened in 1956. The exterior and two-story pinwheel floor plan are derived from Wright’s unrealized design for the St. Mark’s-in-the-Bowery apartment buildings in New York City (1927-1929).*

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 011.JPG

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 009.JPG

The Inn at Price Tower hotel opened in 2003. Blanchard said in a television interview that it was no longer profitable to operate the hotel and its Copper Bar and Restaurant. She announced the closure August 9. Hotel and restaurant employees were laid off and tenants of the building were given notice to move out within 30 days. She said in an interview that the closure is not necessarily permanent, and that she hopes to find a buyer for the building which, she says, is no longer profitable for her to operate.

The photographs are from our stay at the hotel in April 2011. Scott Perkins, who was the Curator of Collections and Exhibitions and at the Price Tower Arts Center, was our host, graciously allowed me to photograph every nook and cranny of the building (he is now Fallingwater’s senior Director of Preservation and Collections).

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 014.JPGThis photograph and the one below were taken looking up on the external staircase.

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 013.JPG

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 010.JPGPrice Tower reflected in a nearby building

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 019.JPGThe living room of one of the original apartments

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 018.JPGThe sitting room on the lower floor of one of the two-story hotel rooms

One can only hope that my sunset photo of Price Tower was not a harbinger of things to come.

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 002.JPG

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 017.JPG

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 012.JPG

*While Price Tower was designed around Wright’s idea of a taproot tower, the late Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer told me that it is not a taproot tower because it is tied into the foundation of the adjoining two-story office building. He told me that the SC Johnson Research Tower in Racine is Wright’s only realized taproot tower.

Author’s note: Thank you to the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy for their attention to the tower, and to the Building Conservancy’s John Waters for his editing notes on this article.

Please scroll down for previous posts on this site.

Links:

Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy coverage:

https://savewright.org/endangered-price-tower-in-bartlesville-oklahoma/

Local television coverage:

https://www.newson6.com/story/66b6bcf3e64a7a286feca72e/price-tower-in-bartlesville-closes-due-to-financial-struggles-future-uncertain

Wright’s Birthday: Wright in the Abstract

Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2024)

LR Frank Lloyd Wright in Racine.jpgSC Johnson Administration Building, Racine (1936)

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):

LR Romeo and Juliet 1.23.22 006.jpg

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

LR 1319 Gene + 10 007.jpg

Meyer May House, Grand Rapids (1908):

LR Meyer May House 054.jpg

LR Meyer May House 105.jpg

Hollyhock House, Los Angeles (1917):

LR Hollyhock House 10.3.19 019.jpg

Taliesin III, Spring Green (1925):

LR Taliesin 1.23.22 026.jpg

LR Taliesin 1.23.22 029.jpg

LR Taliesin 1.23.22 073.jpg

LR Taliesin.jpg

LR Taliesin 5.15.19 001.jpg

LR Taliesin 6.8.19 025.jpg

Tour guests in Wright’s bedroom at Taliesin III:

LR Taliesin Tour.jpg

Hillside Drafting Room, Spring Green (1932):

LR Hillside Drafting Room 5.20.22 017.jpg

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

LR Adm Bldg Tower 2010 016.jpg

LR SCJ Admin. Building 2015 028.jpg

LR Adm. Bldg. Furniture  Jun 2012 027a.jpg

LR Glass Dome 2017 002.jpg

LR Glass Dome Sept4.07 014.jpg

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

LR Clerestory Sun 013.jpg

LR Wingspread Aerial 6.16.21 011.jpg

Florida Southern College, Lakeland (Beginning in 1938):

LR Esplanades 067.jpg

LR Esplanades 094.jpg

LR Esplanades 086.jpg

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

LR Tower framed 009.jpg

LR Tower Fall Sun.jpg

LR SC Johnson Admin Building Tower 6.16.20 003.jpg

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

LR Guggenheim Museum 2017 025.jpg

Price Tower, Bartlesville (1952):

LR Price Tower a Sunrise 005.jpg

LR Price Tower Reflection 005.jpg

LR Price Tower Misc. Details 062.jpg

Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa (1956):

LR AGOC 6.16.22 048.jpg

LR AGOC 6.16.22 060.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 011.jpg

Lindholm Service Station, Cloquet, Minnesota (1957):

LR Lindholm Service Station 6.7.21 020.jpg

Marin County, California, Civic Center (1957):

LR Marin County 2015 007.jpg

LR Marin County 2015 055.jpg

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:

LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 028.jpg

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

 

Wright in the Abstract

Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2022)

I had to edit 34,575 Frank Lloyd Wright building images (or 185.62 GB) down to 30 photos for an exhibit.

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IMG_2494.jpeg

Here’s the backstory: Lake Forest (Illinois) College, my alma mater, honored me with two concurrent exhibits this month for my 50th anniversary Homecoming. Rebecca Goldberg, Lecturer in Art and Director of the Gallery in the Romanesque Durand Art Institute building, initially asked me just to include a handful of my Frank Lloyd Wright work in an exhibit of my career in photojournalism. I found it hard to edit the Wright work down to just four or so photos. Fortunately there was enough space in two galleries to mount two separate exhibits, each with 30 prints. I decided to pick mostly abstract interpretations of Wright’s work than show perhaps predictable building photos. My selection is below, in alphabetical order of the commissions:

LR Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church (1956) .jpgAnnunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, 1956

LR Florida Southern College (1938)  .jpgFlorida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938

LR Florida Southern College (1938) .jpgFlorida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938

LR Florida Southern College (1938).jpgFlorida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938

LR Guggenheim Museum (1943).jpgGuggenheim Museum, New York City, 1943

LR Hillside Drafting Studio (ca. 1933).jpgHillside Drafting Room, Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1933

LR Hollyhock House (1919).jpgHollyhock House, Los Angeles, 1919

LR Imperial Hotel (1915).jpgImperial Hotel entry way, Tokyo, 1915, as rebuilt at Meiji Mura near Nagoya, Japan

LR Lindholm Service Station (1956).jpgLindholm Service Station, Cloquet, Minnesota, 1956

LR Marin County Civic Center (1957) .jpgMarin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957

LR Marin County Civic Center (1957).jpgMarin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957

LR Meyer May House  (1908) .jpgMeyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908

LR Meyer May House (1908) .jpgMeyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908

LR Meyer May House (1908).jpgMeyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908

LR Price Tower (1956)   .jpgPrice Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952

LR Price Tower (1956) .jpgPrice Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952

LR Price Tower (1956).jpgPrice Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952

LR Romeo and Julie Windmill (1898).jpgRomeo and Juliet Windmill, Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1898

LR SC Johnson Administration Building (1936).jpgSC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936

LR SC Johnson Addition (1943-44).jpgSC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936

LR SC Johnson Administration Building (1936) .jpg

SC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936

LR SC Johnson Research Tower (1943-44) .jpgSC Johnson Research Tower, Racine, Wisconsin, 1943/44

LR Taliesin (1911, 1925)    .jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Taliesin (1911, 1925)   .jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Taliesin (1911, 1925).jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Taliesin Visitors (1911, 1925).jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Thomas P. Hardy House (1904-05).jpgThomas P. Hardy House, Racine, Wisconsin, 1904/05

LR Wingspread (1937) .jpgWingspread, Wind Point, Wisconsin, 1937

LR Wingspread (1937).jpgWingspread, Wind Point, Wisconsin, 1937

Now, as for those 34,575 images…if I had time to go through them, a good chunk could be deleted. But who has time to do that?

Hours for the gallery…the show runs through October 30:

https://www.lakeforest.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/art-and-art-history/art-galleries

Keep scrolling down for previous posts on the website…