Frank Lloyd Wright's Palmer House
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Summary
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With a rich compendium of personal information and an extensive array of photographs, plans, and diagrams created especially for this book, Frank Lloyd Wright's Palmer House offers a comprehensive exploration of a living work of art and an intimate portrait of the people who, having brought it into being, treasured its presence in their lives for half a century.
Citing the particular synergies of architect and client, house and site, Hildebrand situates the heretofore little-known Palmer house within the context of Wright's overall oeuvre and presents a convincing argument for the inclusion of the Palmer house in the canon of the architect's finest residential designs.
Grant Hildebrand is a University of Washington professor emeritus of architecture and art history and author of The Wright Space: Pattern and Meaning in Frank Lloyd Wright's Houses. He is a recipient of the Washington Governor's Writers Award, for work of literary merit and lasting value. Leonard K. Eaton is a University of Michigan professor emeritus of architecture and author of Two Chicago Architects and Their Clients: Frank Lloyd Wright and Howard van Doren Shaw. He and his wife, Ann Eaton, now live on the Oregon coast.
"Hildebrand, an authority on Wright's use of space, contributes an astute, absorbing analysis of the design and construction of the house. This is a study of a series of fortuitous relationships: of Mary and Billy Palmer, of an architect and his clients, and of writers who have seamlessly and gracefully joined their disparate interests....Highly recommended." -Choice
"This is a book that offers a wide variety of perspectives; it has appeal on a personal level - the story of designing and building a particular house - and contributes to Frank Lloyd Wright scholarship. Hildebrand and Eaton are two of the leading Wright specialists in the United States." - Richard Guy Wilson, University of Virginia
"A book that will delight all lovers of architecture. Frank Lloyd Wright's Palmer House provides a rare example of sympathetic in-depth analysis of an important building from the highly personal position of both client and historian." - Jennifer Taylor, Queensland University of Technology
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