Kenneth Dahlin
Frank Lloyd Wright and the Path to Beauty
Kenneth Dahlin
Frank Lloyd Wright and the Path to Beauty
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This book connects Frank Lloyd Wright's organic theory with his pursuit of beauty, presenting a path for the recovery of beauty in architecture.
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This book connects Frank Lloyd Wright's organic theory with his pursuit of beauty, presenting a path for the recovery of beauty in architecture.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 246
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juni 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm
- ISBN-13: 9781032620053
- ISBN-10: 1032620056
- Artikelnr.: 72700519
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 246
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juni 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm
- ISBN-13: 9781032620053
- ISBN-10: 1032620056
- Artikelnr.: 72700519
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Kenneth Dahlin, PhD, is Principal Architect and CEO of Genesis Architecture. He earned his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's School of Architecture and Urban Planning, focusing on Frank Lloyd Wright's theory of organic architecture. In addition to leading his firm, he has served as an adjunct professor at UW-Milwaukee.
List of figures
Introduction
Chapter 1: Early Foundations
Chicago Awakening
Louis Sullivan
Viollet-le-Duc
A Philosophy of Fine Art
The House Beautiful
Chapter 2: The Middle Way
Wright's Early Influence on Modernism
Bourdieu's Model of Cultural Competence
E.M. Zemach's Perspective on Taste
Gasset's Modernist Rupture
International Style as Avant-garde
Wright's Rootedness in Nature and History
Leo Marx's American Machine in the Garden
Defining the Machine
The Robie House
Fallingwater and Villa Savoye
Price Tower and Lake Shore Drive Apartments
Chapter 3: The Centrality of Japan in Wright's Philosophy Of Art
Ernest Fenollosa
Spatial Character of the Japanese Print
Wright's Exposure to Japanese Art
What Wright Saw in Japanese Art
The Influence on Wright's Drawings
The Influence on Wright's Architecture
Arnheim and Gestalt Theory
Examples of Spatial Construction in Japanese Prints
Unity Temple
The Imperial Hotel
The Schwartz House
Chapter 4: The Integrated Whole and What it Implies
Wright's Conception of Unity and the Integrated Whole
Philosophical Implications
The Golden Mean
Dialectical Nature of Wright's Integrated Whole
Analysis of Wright's Organic Floor Plans
Chapter 5: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Why Hegel?
Is Architecture an Art?
Essence, Entity, and the Intrinsic Nature of Beauty in Hegel's System
Hegel's Dialectic and Wright's Organic Resolution of Form
A Comparison of Hegel's and Wright's Theories
Some Differences Between Hegel and Wright
Hegel's End of Art and Architecture Revisited
Chapter 6: The Ancient Path
The Premodern Perspective
The Four Causes
Hylemorphism
Essentialism
Teleology
Beauty
Aristotle, Quantum Physics, and Frank Lloyd Wright
Chapter 7: A Way Forward
The Organic Reconsidered
The Core of the Organic
A Model Theory of Organic Architecture
Importance and Relevance for Today and Tomorrow
Potential for Further Exploration and Application
Index
Introduction
Chapter 1: Early Foundations
Chicago Awakening
Louis Sullivan
Viollet-le-Duc
A Philosophy of Fine Art
The House Beautiful
Chapter 2: The Middle Way
Wright's Early Influence on Modernism
Bourdieu's Model of Cultural Competence
E.M. Zemach's Perspective on Taste
Gasset's Modernist Rupture
International Style as Avant-garde
Wright's Rootedness in Nature and History
Leo Marx's American Machine in the Garden
Defining the Machine
The Robie House
Fallingwater and Villa Savoye
Price Tower and Lake Shore Drive Apartments
Chapter 3: The Centrality of Japan in Wright's Philosophy Of Art
Ernest Fenollosa
Spatial Character of the Japanese Print
Wright's Exposure to Japanese Art
What Wright Saw in Japanese Art
The Influence on Wright's Drawings
The Influence on Wright's Architecture
Arnheim and Gestalt Theory
Examples of Spatial Construction in Japanese Prints
Unity Temple
The Imperial Hotel
The Schwartz House
Chapter 4: The Integrated Whole and What it Implies
Wright's Conception of Unity and the Integrated Whole
Philosophical Implications
The Golden Mean
Dialectical Nature of Wright's Integrated Whole
Analysis of Wright's Organic Floor Plans
Chapter 5: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Why Hegel?
Is Architecture an Art?
Essence, Entity, and the Intrinsic Nature of Beauty in Hegel's System
Hegel's Dialectic and Wright's Organic Resolution of Form
A Comparison of Hegel's and Wright's Theories
Some Differences Between Hegel and Wright
Hegel's End of Art and Architecture Revisited
Chapter 6: The Ancient Path
The Premodern Perspective
The Four Causes
Hylemorphism
Essentialism
Teleology
Beauty
Aristotle, Quantum Physics, and Frank Lloyd Wright
Chapter 7: A Way Forward
The Organic Reconsidered
The Core of the Organic
A Model Theory of Organic Architecture
Importance and Relevance for Today and Tomorrow
Potential for Further Exploration and Application
Index
List of figures
Introduction
Chapter 1: Early Foundations
Chicago Awakening
Louis Sullivan
Viollet-le-Duc
A Philosophy of Fine Art
The House Beautiful
Chapter 2: The Middle Way
Wright's Early Influence on Modernism
Bourdieu's Model of Cultural Competence
E.M. Zemach's Perspective on Taste
Gasset's Modernist Rupture
International Style as Avant-garde
Wright's Rootedness in Nature and History
Leo Marx's American Machine in the Garden
Defining the Machine
The Robie House
Fallingwater and Villa Savoye
Price Tower and Lake Shore Drive Apartments
Chapter 3: The Centrality of Japan in Wright's Philosophy Of Art
Ernest Fenollosa
Spatial Character of the Japanese Print
Wright's Exposure to Japanese Art
What Wright Saw in Japanese Art
The Influence on Wright's Drawings
The Influence on Wright's Architecture
Arnheim and Gestalt Theory
Examples of Spatial Construction in Japanese Prints
Unity Temple
The Imperial Hotel
The Schwartz House
Chapter 4: The Integrated Whole and What it Implies
Wright's Conception of Unity and the Integrated Whole
Philosophical Implications
The Golden Mean
Dialectical Nature of Wright's Integrated Whole
Analysis of Wright's Organic Floor Plans
Chapter 5: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Why Hegel?
Is Architecture an Art?
Essence, Entity, and the Intrinsic Nature of Beauty in Hegel's System
Hegel's Dialectic and Wright's Organic Resolution of Form
A Comparison of Hegel's and Wright's Theories
Some Differences Between Hegel and Wright
Hegel's End of Art and Architecture Revisited
Chapter 6: The Ancient Path
The Premodern Perspective
The Four Causes
Hylemorphism
Essentialism
Teleology
Beauty
Aristotle, Quantum Physics, and Frank Lloyd Wright
Chapter 7: A Way Forward
The Organic Reconsidered
The Core of the Organic
A Model Theory of Organic Architecture
Importance and Relevance for Today and Tomorrow
Potential for Further Exploration and Application
Index
Introduction
Chapter 1: Early Foundations
Chicago Awakening
Louis Sullivan
Viollet-le-Duc
A Philosophy of Fine Art
The House Beautiful
Chapter 2: The Middle Way
Wright's Early Influence on Modernism
Bourdieu's Model of Cultural Competence
E.M. Zemach's Perspective on Taste
Gasset's Modernist Rupture
International Style as Avant-garde
Wright's Rootedness in Nature and History
Leo Marx's American Machine in the Garden
Defining the Machine
The Robie House
Fallingwater and Villa Savoye
Price Tower and Lake Shore Drive Apartments
Chapter 3: The Centrality of Japan in Wright's Philosophy Of Art
Ernest Fenollosa
Spatial Character of the Japanese Print
Wright's Exposure to Japanese Art
What Wright Saw in Japanese Art
The Influence on Wright's Drawings
The Influence on Wright's Architecture
Arnheim and Gestalt Theory
Examples of Spatial Construction in Japanese Prints
Unity Temple
The Imperial Hotel
The Schwartz House
Chapter 4: The Integrated Whole and What it Implies
Wright's Conception of Unity and the Integrated Whole
Philosophical Implications
The Golden Mean
Dialectical Nature of Wright's Integrated Whole
Analysis of Wright's Organic Floor Plans
Chapter 5: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Why Hegel?
Is Architecture an Art?
Essence, Entity, and the Intrinsic Nature of Beauty in Hegel's System
Hegel's Dialectic and Wright's Organic Resolution of Form
A Comparison of Hegel's and Wright's Theories
Some Differences Between Hegel and Wright
Hegel's End of Art and Architecture Revisited
Chapter 6: The Ancient Path
The Premodern Perspective
The Four Causes
Hylemorphism
Essentialism
Teleology
Beauty
Aristotle, Quantum Physics, and Frank Lloyd Wright
Chapter 7: A Way Forward
The Organic Reconsidered
The Core of the Organic
A Model Theory of Organic Architecture
Importance and Relevance for Today and Tomorrow
Potential for Further Exploration and Application
Index