(NEW YORK, NY – March 16, 2009) – Fifty years after the
realization of Frank Lloyd Wright’s renowned design, the Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum celebrates the
golden anniversary of its landmark building with the exhibition Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward,
co-organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. On
view from May 15 through August 23, 2009, the 50th anniversary exhibition brings
together 64 projects designed by one of the most influential architects of the
20th century, including privately commissioned residences, civic and government
buildings, religious and performance spaces, as well as unrealized urban
mega-structures. Presented on the spiral ramps of Wright’s museum through a
range of media—including more than 200 original Frank Lloyd Wright drawings,
many of which are on view to the public for the first time, as well as newly
commissioned models and digital animations—Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward
illuminates Wright’s pioneering concepts of space and reveals the architect’s
continuing relevance to contemporary design.
The exhibition takes its title from Frank Lloyd Wright’s musings on the importance of interior space in shaping and informing a structure’s exterior. “The building is no longer a block of building material dealt with, artistically, from the outside,” Wright said. “The room within is the great fact about building—the room to be expressed in the exterior as space enclosed.” Few designs in Wright’s oeuvre so well illustrate the concept of designing “from within outward” as the Guggenheim Museum, in which the interior form gives shape to the exterior shell of the building.
Richard Armstrong, Director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and Museum, stated, “Fifty years ago, the trajectories of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Frank Lloyd Wright became intertwined. When it opened in October 1959, the museum drew both criticism and admiration, but what was indisputable was that Wright had reinvented the art museum.” Armstrong continued, “How fitting that we open our fiftieth-anniversary celebrations with Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward, an exhibition that documents and challenges how architecture influences the way we live and how we experience art.”
“Rather than a retrospective, this exhibition focuses on the diversity of Wright’s vision and the ways he sought to realize it, conveying fresh perspectives on how the buildings themselves celebrate that vision through spaces that enrich our lives with their transformational power,” said Phil Allsopp, President and CEO of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, the only organization established by Frank Lloyd Wright to be the repository of his life’s work and the first to bear his name. “The concept of the exhibition also reflects a growing recognition of the enormous relevance today of Frank Lloyd Wright’s design philosophies, which embrace culture, technology and environment. The exhibition articulates the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation’s public mission and active engagement in education, scholarship, design, research, historic preservation, and public policy.” The Frank Lloyd Wright Archives, which the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation owns and operates at its headquarters in Scottsdale, Arizona, is the primary source of loans for the exhibition.
During his 72-year career, Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959), who died just six months before the opening of the Guggenheim, worked independently from any single style and developed a new sense of architecture in which form and function are inseparable. Known for his inventiveness and the diversity of his work, Wright is celebrated for the awe-inspiring beauty and tranquility of his designs. Whether creating a private home, workplace, religious edifice, or cultural attraction, Wright sought to unite people, buildings, and nature in physical and spiritual harmony. To realize such a union in material form, Wright created environments of simplicity and repose through carefully composed plans and elevations based on consistent, geometric grammars.
His innovative designs complement the surrounding environment of the site and intensify the physical, emotional, and social experience of flowing, continuous space within them. In his earliest designs, such as the Larkin Company Administration Building (Buffalo, New York, 1902–06) and Unity Temple (Oak Park, Illinois, 1905), Wright carefully deconstructs the box-like environment of his European contemporaries by opening up corners and using walls merely as screens to enclose tranquil interior spaces. Wright’s architecture is a translation of his conception of society into a spatial language that can be understood intuitively and enhances the everyday experience. While the aesthetic strength of Wright’s work has invited people to revisit his idiom, it is the ambition of Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward to celebrate the basic idea behind his architecture—the sense of freedom in interior space—and inspire visitors to see the potential that architecture can carry for the here and now and for the future.
Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward is organized in a loosely chronological order and is installed to be viewed from the rotunda floor upwards. Off the first ramp in the High Gallery is an original curtain depicting Wright’s native Wisconsin landscape from the 1952 Hillside Theater at Taliesin, Wright’s home and studio in Spring Green, Wisconsin (1911–59). On loan from Taliesin, this curtain creates the backdrop for a sound installation of recorded oral histories from the collection of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, which feature the voices of clients, friends, apprentices, and architects reflecting on the revelatory experience of living and working in Wright-designed spaces.
Highlights of Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward include newly created three-dimensional scale models that examine the internal mechanics of functional space in relation to exterior form in a variety of Wright’s projects. Among these are an exploded version of the Herbert Jacobs House (Madison, Wisconsin, 1937); a mirrored model for Unity Temple; and a sectional model of Beth Sholom Synagogue (Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, 1953). Large-scale models of unrealized urban schemes for projects, including his Plan for Greater Baghdad (1957), the Crystal City for Washington, D.C. (1940), and the Pittsburgh Point Civic Center (1947), provide insight into Wright’s visions for the landscapes of the city. The models were developed by Michael Kennedy of New York–based Kennedy Fabrications Inc., which specializes in architectural models and prototyping, and Situ Studio, a Brooklyn-based firm focused on research, design, and fabrication.
Special animations offer viewers the opportunity to experience an interpretation of nine of Wright’s un-built or demolished projects as well as his own Taliesin and Taliesin West. The animations were designed by teams of students from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design Interactive Spaces course taught by Allen Sayegh and from Madison Area Technical College, with the assistance of Archi Zarzycki of arc.studio.3d and ZD Studios (both also of Madison).
The curatorial team
for Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within
Outward includes Thomas
Krens, curator and Senior Advisor of International Affairs for the Solomon
R. Guggenheim Foundation; David van der
Leer, Assistant Curator of Architecture and Design; and
Maria Nicanor, Curatorial Assistant,
all for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, in collaboration with Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, Director of
the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives; Margo Stipe, Curator and Registrar of
Collections of the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives; and Oskar Muñoz, Assistant
Director of the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives. Mina Marefat, an architect and Wright scholar, has served
as Curatorial Consultant for the Baghdad module of the exhibition.
Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward
has been designed by the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum with Wendy Evans Joseph Architects
of New York.
Media partner
Thirteen/WNET.
The Legacy of Frank Lloyd
Wright
In 1990,
the Solomon
R. Guggenheim Museum was declared a landmark by the New
York City Landmark Preservation Commission and in 2005 was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. On October 7, 2008, the Interior Secretary
of the United
States named the Guggenheim a National Historic
Landmark in recognition of the museum’s significance within American history and
culture. UNESCO World Heritage Center also is considering Wright’s legacy: ten
of the architect’s most relevant buildings, including the Guggenheim Museum,
Taliesin, and Taliesin West, his home and studio in Scottsdale and the
headquarters of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, have recently been included
on the United States’ World Heritage Tentative List, which identifies the most
significant cultural and natural treasures worldwide.
In anticipation of
its 50th anniversary in 2009, the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum recently undertook a four-year
restoration, the results of which were unveiled in September 2008. At the outset
of the restoration project, a team of architects, structural engineers, and
conservators undertook a comprehensive condition assessment and found that,
while the building remained in good structural condition, the removal of 11
coats of paint, the infilling of exterior cracks, the treatment of corroded
steel structures, and the repair and reinforcement of the concrete were
essential to insure the ongoing health of the
structure.
With its legacy
grounded in the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, the Guggenheim is dedicated
to exploring the connections between design, architecture, and other
forms of art, especially in the context of the city. Design exhibitions organized by the
Guggenheim have included the 2001 retrospective of the work of architect Frank
Gehry, which became the most attended show in the history of the New York museum, and a
retrospective of the work of architect Zaha Hadid in 2006. With such projects at the
forefront, the Guggenheim has initiated the development of a broad program in
which architecture and design become a means of expression to document, divert,
and direct our increasingly urban societies.
Exhibition
Tour
Following
the presentation of Frank Lloyd Wright: From
Within Outward at the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum in New York,
the exhibition will travel to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Bilbao, Spain, where it will be on view from
October 6, 2009 through February 2010.
Publications
Frank Lloyd Wright:
From Within Outward
is accompanied by a fully illustrated exhibition catalogue published by
Skira/Rizzoli. With
forewords by Phil Allsopp, Richard Armstrong, and Thomas Krens, the catalogue
will include essays by Wright scholars Richard Cleary, Neil Levine, Mina
Marefat, Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, Joseph M. Siry, and Margo Stipe.
In addition to the exhibition catalogue, The Guggenheim: Frank Lloyd Wright and the Making of the Modern Museum
will be published on the occasion of museum’s fiftieth anniversary and
in association with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. This first-ever
book to explore the 16-year construction process behind one of the
greatest modern buildings in America will examine the history, design,
and construction of Wright’s masterwork. Fully illustrated with
preliminary drawings, models, and photographs, the book includes three
major essays by Hillary Ballon, Neil Levine and Joseph Siry.
Education and Public Programs
In conjunction
with the exhibition, the Sackler Center for Arts Education at the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum presents a full roster of educational programs, including
Learning by Doing, an exhibition
featuring a selection of shelters designed, built, and lived in by students at
the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture in Arizona and Wisconsin over the
past seven decades. Curated by David van der Leer, Assistant Curator of
Architecture and Design, in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright School of
Architecture, the exhibition provides an opportunity for visitors of all ages to
create their own designs, which will be incorporated into Learning by Doing over the course of the
summer.
In addition, the
Sackler
Center will present the
two-day symposium Frank Lloyd Wright: Now
What Architecture?! on May 14 and 15 in the Peter B. Lewis
Theater at the museum. Based upon the architect's
captivating 1931 question, this symposium––which will include
debates on contemporary architecture and urban design among scholars,
architects, designers, and cultural critics from around the world––will
introduce Wright’s ideas about space into the 21st century’s dialogue.
Among the additional
public programming offered, The Architecture
of Writing: Wright, Women and Narrative will be presented on
Wednesday, June 10 at 6:30 pm. Moderated by Sarah Williams Goldhagen, The New Republic, participants will
include Carol Gilligan, New York University, Gwendolyn Wright, Columbia
University, and Beverly Willis, FAIA. Honoring Taliesin Fellow Lois Gottlieb, this special
evening features the premiere of A Girl Is A
Fellow Here: 100 Women Architects in the Studio of Frank Lloyd
Wright, a new 15-minute film produced by the Beverly Willis
Architecture Foundation, followed by a panel discussion that seeks to expand
definitions of architectural genius in which collaboration, in general, and
women, in particular, assume greater stature in the remarkable history of Frank
Lloyd Wright and in the rich history of American architecture. This event is
co-organized by the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum and the Beverly Willis Architecture
Foundation. For more
information, visit www.guggenheim.org/education
or contact the Box Office at 212 423-3587.
On April 13, one month before the opening
of Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within
Outward, the Graduate School of Architecture,
Planning and Preservation (GSAPP) at Columbia University will host the panel discussion
Frank Lloyd Wright in the 21st
Century: Being Versus Seeming? Moderated by Kenneth Frampton, Ware
Professor of Architecture at Columbia, with Michael Maltzan, Michael Maltzan
Architecture, Los Angeles; Shohei Shigematsu, OMA*AMO PC, New York; and Marion
Weiss, WEISS/MANFREDI–Architecture/Landscape/Urbanism, New York, the panel will
include an introduction of the Guggenheim Museum’s spring Frank Lloyd Wright
programs by David van der Leer. For information contact Benjamin Prosky,
Director of Special Events, GSAPP, Columbia University, (212) 854-9248, or visit www.arch.columbia.edu.
About
the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
The Frank Lloyd Wright
Foundation is a leading global multidisciplinary center for education,
scholarship, debate, and research committed to the place of architecture and the
arts in enriching the quality and dignity of life. The Frank Lloyd Wright
Foundation’s mission is to educate and engage diverse audiences through programs
that encourage innovative thinking about the relationships between architecture
and design and the natural environment, and inspire a quest for beauty, balance
and harmony in the creation of buildings and spaces that enrich daily life; and
preserve the works, ideas and innovative spirit of Frank Lloyd Wright for the
benefit of all generations. Wright established the foundation, headquartered in
Scottsdale, Arizona, in 1940 to be the repository of his
life’s work. The foundation owns and operates Taliesin in Spring Green,
Wisconsin, and Taliesin West in Scottsdale, Arizona (Wright’s own homes and studios); the
professionally accredited Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture; and the
Frank Lloyd Wright Archives, widely regarded as the largest of its kind devoted
to the works of a single artist worldwide. Both Taliesin and Taliesin West are
National Historic Properties and are on the United States World Heritage
Tentative List. For information visit www.franklloydwright.org.
About
the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Founded in 1937, the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation is dedicated to promoting the understanding and
appreciation of art, primarily of the modern and contemporary periods, through
exhibitions, education programs, research initiatives, and publications.
Currently the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Foundation owns and operates the Guggenheim Museum on Fifth Avenue in
New York and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection on the Grand Canal in Venice, and
also provides programming and management for two other museums in Europe that
bear its name: the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and the Deutsche Guggenheim in
Berlin. In early 2013 the
Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, a 452,000-square-foot museum of modern and contemporary
art designed by architect Frank Gehry, is scheduled to
open.
Upcoming
Exhibitions
In
addition to Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within
Outward, the Guggenheim will present a broad range of exhibitions as
part of the fiftieth anniversary celebrations, including Intervals: Julieta Aranda (April 10 – July
19, 2009), the first in an experimental new series designed to reflect the
spirit of young and emerging artists; The Sweeney Decade: Recent Acquisitions at the 1959 Inaugural (June 5 –
September 2, 2009), an exhibition of major collection works acquired by former
Guggenheim Director James Johnson Sweeney during his tenure from 1952-60,
including examples of international post-WWII trends in abstraction; Kandinsky (September 18, 2009 –
January 10, 2010), a chronological survey of more than 100 paintings drawn from
the three institutions that own the greatest concentration of the artist’s work
in the world: the Guggenheim, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, and Städtische
Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich—as well as significant loans from private and
public holdings; Anish Kapoor: Memory
(October 9, 2009 – March 21, 2010), an installation of a major work
commissioned by the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin; and Tino
Sehgal
(January-February 2010), an exhibition of the London-born, Berlin-based artist in which he utilizes
the Frank Lloyd Wright rotunda, offering visitors a unique opportunity to engage
with the architecture as a purely social space.
VISITOR
INFORMATION
Admission: Adults $18.00,
students/seniors (65+) $15.00, members and children under 12 free. Admission
includes audio-guide tour.
Museum Hours: Saturday to
Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. to 7:45 p.m. Closed Thursday.
Starting May 15, the museum hosts Pay What You Wish on Saturday evenings,
beginning at 5:45 p.m. For general information, call 212 423-3500, or visit www.guggenheim.org.
With More Than 200 Archival Drawings, New Models, Animations, and Oral Histories
Exhibition: Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within
Outward
Venue:
Solomon
R. Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Avenue, New
York
Dates: May
15–August 23, 2009
Preview:
Thursday, May 14, 10 a.m.–1 p.m.