Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin Building

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2006-05-15
Publisher(s): Univ of Chicago Pr
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Summary

Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin Building has become an icon of modern architecture. And the fact that it was demolished only forty-six years after its 1904 completion makes Jack Quinan's study of the buildingwhich housed a Buffalo, New York, soap companyall the more valuable. Quinan's history draws on engineering documents, personal accounts of the building, and other papers he acquired from the family of Darwin D. Martin, a Larkin executive who proposed commissioning Wright to design the company's offices. With access to these rare sources, Quinan reveals how a young Wright landed the commission and traces the evolution of his cutting-edge plans. Quinan then takes Wright studies to a new level, examining the Larkin Building as a structure at the center of economic and personal relationships. Illustrated with more than one hundred photographs, floor plans, maps, and diagrams, Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin Building provides a concise but complete record of how the building was conceived, built, evaluated, and finally demolished in what has been called a tragic loss for American architecture.

Author Biography

Jack Quinan is professor of art history at the State University of New York at Buffalo. The author of several books on Frank Lloyd Wright, he is also the founder of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy and the curator of Wright’s Darwin D. Martin House in Buffalo, New York.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Foreword xi
Edgar Kaufmann, jr.
Introduction xiii
The Commission
3(7)
The History of The Larkin Company
10(11)
The Evolution and Sources of the Design
21(23)
Functional Aspects of the Design
44(41)
The Message in the Building
85(26)
The Critical Response
111(8)
The Demolition
119(10)
Appendix A: Darwin Martin's Office Building Requirements 129(1)
Appendix B: Darwin Martin Letter to John Larkin of January 7, 1903 refuting the Coss plan 130(1)
Appendix C: Darwin Martin Letter to John Larkin of March 20, 1903 reporting on Wright 131(3)
Appendix D: Darwin Martin Letter to John Larkin of May 12, 1903 refuting the Health plan 134(3)
Appendix E: ``The Inscriptions on the Court of the Administration Building'' 137(2)
Appendix F: Chronological List of Writings on the Larkin Administration Building 139(1)
Appendix C: Frank Lloyd Wright, ``The New Larkin Administration Building'' 140(5)
Appendix H: William Heath, ``The Office Building and What It Will Bring to the Office Force'' 145(4)
Appendix I: George Twitmyer, ``A Model Administration Building'' 149(5)
Appendix J: Marion Harland, ``The Administration Building'' 154(5)
Appendix K: Russell Sturgis, ``The Larkin Building in Buffalo'' 159(6)
Appendix L: Frank Lloyd Wright, ``Reply to Mr. Sturgis's Criticism'' 165(4)
Notes 169(18)
Index 187

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