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À̸§:architour (webmaster@architour.net)
ÀÏÁ¤ (mm/dd/yy-mm/dd/yy):03/14/03-07/20/03
Áö¿ª:Washington, D.C.
2003/5/11(ÀÏ)
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Frank Lloyd Wright ÀÇ Àü½Ãȸ...
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¡°Ornament ... non-existent unless integral.¡± — Frank Lloyd Wright
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Light Screens: The Leaded Glass of Frank Lloyd Wright March 14 through July 20, 2003
From 1885 to 1923, decorative glass windows were an integral part of the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959). During this period, Wright designed more than 4,500 windows for 160 buildings, of which almost 100 were completed. These "light screens," as he called them, were specific to the structures for which they were designed. The evolution of his thinking about architecture, the integration of ornament, and the relation of interior space to exterior setting can be studied by a chronological survey of the windows he created. Rejecting the opalescent, painterly effects achieved by Louis Comfort Tiffany and John La Farge, Wright used predominantly clear glass and geometric shapes to create screens between inside and outside environments.
The exhibition includes 48 windows—some from private collections that have never before been shown publicly—as well as two architectural models and 13 original plates from Wright's Wasmuth portfolio. The exhibition is divided into three chronological sections: "A Vocabulary of Form, 1885–1899," "A Language of Pattern, 1900–1910" and "A New Poetics, 1911–1923."
Credit: "Light Screens: The Leaded Glass of Frank Lloyd Wright" is organized by Exhibitions International, N.Y. in cooperation with The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, Scottsdale, Ariz. The exhibition and its national tour are sponsored by Steelcase Inc. The exhibition's presentation at the Renwick Gallery is supported by the James Renwick Alliance, Steelcase Inc. and Arbee Associates.
Location: Smithsonian American Art Museum's Renwick Gallery, 17th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. (202) 357-2700.
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