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News and updates from the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
The United States previously submitted a collection of Wright buildings to the World Heritage List in 2015; the revised nomination will be considered by the World Heritage Committee in July 2019.
Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy | Dec 20, 2018
Use Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hillside Theatre curtain to inspire an abstraction of one of your favorite landscapes!
Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation | Dec 6, 2018
Every house has stories to tell, particularly if the house was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Some stories are familiar. Some are even true. Some, true or not, have been lost to time, while others are yet to be told. Steve Sikora, owner of the Malcom Willey House, continues his exploration of the home and its influence on architecture and society.
Steve Sikora | Nov 12, 2018
Frank Lloyd Wright established a foundation for design with nature, abstraction, and geometry that serves as a source of graphic design inspiration for the past, present, and future Taliesin community.
Aris Georges | Nov 8, 2018
Spanish architect David Romero envisions what might have been in the fall 2018 issue of the Frank Lloyd Wright Quarterly.
Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation | Oct 25, 2018
On April 15, 1935, in the heart of Rockefeller Center in New York, Frank Lloyd Wright mounted an exhibition featuring a radical project called Broadacre City, in which he proposed to resettle the entire population of the United States onto individual homesteads. A veritable Trojan horse that challenged the very urbanity of the space where it was exhibited, Broadacre City advanced an idea of decentralization whereby communities would be based on small-scale farming and manufacturing, local government, and property ownership.
Jennifer Gray | Oct 1, 2018
Steve Sikora | Sep 18, 2018
Architectural and urban history scholar Emily Bills writes about how a young, talented photographer went on to capture some of the most iconic photos of Frank Lloyd Wright and his work, while forming a close bond with the architect.
Emily Bills | Sep 14, 2018
Max Dalton is the artist behind some of the most well-known and widely celebrated pop culture illustrations over the past 20 years that have drawn international attention with iconic Wes Anderson films, Game of Thrones, The Beatles and Breaking Bad inspiring his sketches. Today, Dalton has taken on a new muse – Frank Lloyd Wright.
Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation | Aug 9, 2018