Fallingwater, built directly over the falls
Wiki
I visited Pittsburgh for the first time in 1994 and one of the great day-tours was to Fallingwater. This home was near Mill Run in Pennsylvania, designed by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) in 1935 and completed in 1937. The house was designed as a private residence for the Pittsburgh department store owner, Edgar Kaufmann (1885-1955), his wife Lillian (1889-1952) and their son.
Edgar I commissioned Wright to design a weekend retreat on the family’s land near Pittsburgh. Kaufmann had been introduced to Wright by his son in 1934, when the lad participated in Wright’s Taliesin Training Fellowship for architects and artists. Wright was 67 at the meeting, with few commissions in the midst of the Great Depression. His career was nearing retirement, the early success of his Prairie style residences in the early 1900s having long declined.
Construction of Fallingwater finally began in 1936. Local craftsmen and labourers were hired, and materials were directly excavated from the Kaufmanns’ land. Wright might have been nudging 70, but he still had a bold vision for architecture. Fallingwater would be a masterpiece of Wright’s theories on organic architecture, which sought to integrate humans, architecture and nature together so that each one would be improved by the relationship. Wright believed that architecture must sit comfortably within its natural landscape, replicate its forms and use its materials. So Fallingwater grew from the site’s rocky landscape. Its concrete terraces floated directly above the waterfalls, drawing attention to the water. Their horizontal forms highlighted the boulders below. Although the terraces appeared to hover, they were anchored to the central stone chimney using cantilevers!
Hence the expansive terraces occupied half the building, while the interior spaces were small with low ceilings, creating a sheltered cave in the rugged landscape. The building drew nature inside its 3 floors: natural cliffs protruded from the central fire-place and the sound of rushing water was always present. The design focused on the central fireplace, and the home offered unique features like customised niches to display the Kaufmanns’ art works.
Fallingwater was mainly complete in 1937, with the family soon occupying the residence. It gained more fame when Time Magazine featured Wright and the building plan on its Jan 1938 cover; the daring construction over a waterfall was instrumental in reviving Wright’s architecture career.
Wright added a guest house in sandstone quarried from the property, in 1939. Fallingwater had proved that Wright was an enduring visionary ready for the rest of his career. Some of his most high-profile commissions came after, including the Guggenheim Museum in N.Y. The Kaufmanns continued to reside in Fallingwater.
Light and garden views stream into the loungeroom
INSIDEWRIGHT
Son Edgar Kaufmann II (1910-1989) attended the School for Arts & Crafts at the Austrian Museum of Applied Art in Vienna, in the late 1920s. Then he studied painting for 3 years in Florence. After reading Frank Lloyd Wright's autobiography, young Edgar decided to become a resident apprentice in architecture at Wright's Taliesin East School and Studio from 1933-4.
When he left Wright's Taliesin Fellowship in 1935, Edgar II joined the family business and became merchandise manager for home furnishings, and in 1938, worked for the Kaufmann Dept Stores. In 1940 Edgar wrote to Alfred Barr of the Museum of Modern Art/MOMA, proposing the Organic Design in Home Furnishings Competition, won by Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen.
He served with the Army Air Forces from 1942-6 in WW2. After, he became director of the Industrial Design Dept at M.O.M.A in NY. Edgar's greatest success during his time at MOMA was the Good Design Programme of 1950-5, in which the museum joined with the Merchandise Mart in Chicago, promoting design in household furniture.
Fallingwater architect, Frank Lloyd Wright
MinnieMuse
After his father's death in 1955, Edgar II inherited Falling-water, using it as a mountain retreat. Acting on his father’s wishes, Edgar entrusted the building and surrounding land to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy in 1963. In 1964 Fallingwater opened to the public as an architectural house museum, surrounded by 5,100 acres of natural land called the Bear Run Nature Reserve. Fallingwater was the only major Wright work to come into the public domain with its original furnishings and artwork intact.
From 1963-86, Edgar II was Ass professor of Architecture and Art History at Columbia Uni and wrote books on architecture and modern design. When he died in 1989, Edgar II’s ashes were scattered around Fallingwater by his partner since the 1950s, Paul Mayén. 21 pieces of the family’s art and sculpture collection were auctioned at Sotheby's New York - works of Mondrian, Léger, Klee, Picasso, Braque, Monet, Matisse, de Kooning, Calder, Duchamp and Miró. Finally Paul Mayén oversaw the building of Fallingwater’s pavilion from 1979-81, housing the café, gift store and visitor’s centre.
In 2019 the residence was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, along with 7 other Lloyd Wright designs. In total 5+ million visitors have toured Fallingwater.
22 comments:
Can't believe this is also UNESCO world heritage site. There are so many stories behind this Fallingwater.
If ever an example was needed to describe the two words 'street appeal', this is it. What a stunning yet unobtrusive building.
This very morning, the Weekend Australian showed a Garden Award nominee in Hawthorn East. With no front fence or front lawn, there was plenty of space for plants and floating concrete platforms. The garden attracts many people who stop and talk about the plants, encouraging conversation and sparking joy.
That is an amazing piece of architecture. One would feel part of nature living in such a building.
roentare
you have my complete attention now :) What sort of stories?
Andrew
Wright believed that architecture must sit comfortably within its natural landscape, replicate its forms and use its materials. But normally that sort of language is usually more poetic and less technical. This time, he made the theoretical -> literal.
Train Man
I don't remember if Fallingwater was surrounded by a fence or not; if it was, I didn't notice it at all. In any case, I would agree that Fallingwater had plenty of space for plants and floating concrete platforms. Thank you for your Hawthorn East comparison; Wright's garden brought great joy to the area.
jabblog
designing buildings where the family can feel part of nature is not easy, except perhaps in Jordanian deserts, Australian beach-bush land and Icelandic snow territory. But Wright was keen to make it happen.
No wonder he was rude about his Bauhaus contemporaries who promoted a constructive discipline melding sculpture, painting, design and architecture into a synthesis of free imagination and strict structure.
Helen I know you are a Bauhaus fan. So let me quote the Khan Academy. In 1932 Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson opened the "Modern Architecture: International Exhibition" at the newly founded Museum of Modern Art in NY, publishing the book International Style. This was perhaps the most influential architectural exhibit ever mounted in the United States and the book became a manifesto for modern architecture and would profoundly affect almost every major architectural project worldwide for the next 30 years. It focused on the work of four great European functionalists Walter Gropius, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier and JJP Oud. Wright was largely snubbed.
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/ap-art-history/later-europe-and-americas/modernity-ap/a/frank-lloyd-wright-fallingwater
Nowadays, at least where I live, there'll be second thoughts on whether to allow someone to build on, or close to, a Nature's element as Nature's resources are considered public.There's a big debate going on for some years about a river flowing through a kibbutz (settlement) near the residents' houses; people of a neighboring town consider this very improper, and are demanding free use of the river.
I enjoy visiting interesting architecture (thanks to my Dad who was an architect). This home has been on my list for several years now. One day I hope I might visit the PIttburgh area to see it, but for now I just enjoyed your post Hels. And you've also reminded that there are 2 Frank Lloyd Wright houses about an hour away from me which you can tour through a local museum. They are definitely not Falling Water, but I think I will make an effort to go visit them this summer one day. Have a lovely rest of your weekend. hugs-Erika
Student
Yes!! It acknowledge's Wright's confidence in his own American architecture, but it also suggests the importance of Edgar Kaufmann II in Wright's rise to the top.. over a 25-year client/architect connection! Wright might have been cranky by then, but Kaufmann was a great client and understood the price of working with genius.
DUTA
I absolutely understand the new laws that preserve the natural environment for all people (and animals) to enjoy, so that private buildings need to be carefully considered and possibly be prevented.
But in 1934 Wright was a leader in trying to preserve nature, albeit in a different way. He became an organic architect, one who carefully designed building structures that blended into their natural surroundings. It was radical _then_ because Wright planned architecture that was a bridge to nature, not a blockage. He said he wanted to make nature more beautiful than before his building was built.
Erika
My dad did first year Architecture at uni just before WW2 started, so he understood that he would be more essential if he completed an engineering degree instead. You are blessed with your father.
Although both Manchester New Hampshire houses by Wright were built in the 1950s, much later than Fallingwater, it was clear that Wright’s domestic architecture had already reshaped American home design. So I agree that you must see Zimmerman House (1951) and Kalil House (1955). The tours will explain the architectural designs, choice of materials, gardens and even the furniture.
It is a beautiful house and Wright was way ahead of his time. So glad that it was kept for future generations.
Having just returned from Chicago, Frank Lloyd Wright is very much on my mind. I visited his home and studio and am now a huge fan. He was way ahead of his time. Someone mentioned Falling Water and I was going to look it up when I got home but your timely post has saved me the trouble.
diane
modernism in architecture, after the chaos of WW1, galloped ahead in leaps and bounds. So Frank Lloyd Wright, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, Konstantin Melnikov, Erich Mendelsohn, Gerrit Rietveld, Arne Jacobsen, Oscar Niemeyer and Alvar Aalto were all notable architects who greatly influenced the development of modernist design. But they were in different countries, different decades and had different views of modernism.
Thus I too am delighted that later architects didn't destroy F.L Wright's work, thinking it had had its day.
Fun60
Wright wasn't born in Chicago, but by the time he arrived in the late 1880s, Chicago was hopping and jumping. Note in particular the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition which showed Chicagoans the "transformative power of the built environment".
Wright was deeply influenced by Louis Sullivan's concept of a uniquely American architecture; it suited a modern American way of life while still reflecting the Midwestern landscape. So Chicago certainly was the dream site for Wright’s early Prairie style. You did well visiting Chicago in detail :)
Hi Hels - I've seen a film on Wright and his work ... which certainly brought his architecture and work to my attention. I'd love to visit and learn more - cheers Hilary
Hilary
what was the name of the film and could you recommend it for art history undergrad students?
Definitely on my Bucket list . Hopefully over the next few years . I have a SIL who lives in New York at the moment . I have a great yearning to see all the museums and "Wank Lloyd Frights"efforts. !!!
Falling Water is a sublime building and isn't it uplifting seeing him feat ageism and go onto to do some of his best work?
mem
you are a wise woman! ALWAYS have a close relative in each major city you will want to visit - to avoid all hotel costs and to have a knowledgeable city-guide. When Joe and I first started travelling around the world, we had an uncle/aunt/cousin in London, Manchester, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Vancouver, New York, Winnipeg, Perth and Sydney, but our relatives in Odessa and Vienna were too old by then.
Re an architectural movement being criticised after it moves on from previous movements is no surprise at all. The establishment architects feel their values are being ignored or rejected, and potential patrons may be frightened by the new aesthetics. So you must examine the houses FLWright's designed and decide for yourself.
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