Page Sipe THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE lS vAi#&^-Z' ~ P, .TM ,IA hl A A - .n --*... -unay, March , 195 Organic Architecture Modern Life Must Find Expression in Homes -Frank LloydWright i Jr A TESTAMENT. By Frank Lloyd Wright. New York, 1957: Hori- ?on Press, 255 pp. $12.50. By BERNARD H. STOLLMAN "So, my boy, do not trouble yourself as to whether or not others understand your words as you do. Seek rather to un- derstand yourself-regardless of words; and in due time, if so it be written in the great book of destiny, others will perceive in your works more or less of what you, more or less adequately, have thought, felt, lived, loved and understood." --Louis Sullivan THOUGH many controversial characters have passed upon the American scene in the past sixty years, few have been the cause of as much heated debate as has the Chicago architect, Frank Lloyd Wright. His name outline, a brief summing up of has become a household word everything Wright has ever writ- throughout this country as well as ten and said. Yet his generaliza- many other parts of the world, tions are more poetic and less di- Though most Americans know of dactic in tone. He speaks not to him, very few have any idea why convince but simply because the lie should be a topic for discussion statements are true, lastingin- at all. He is popularly pictured as a self-procliimcd radica, a an- evitable. This is not the teacher preme egotist who has little use cautioning, it is the master for the work of others. prophesying. A Testament is, in many ways, Though accused of being a self- the culmination of the more than appointed radical and the origi- r sixty years that Wright has been nator of a new kind of architec- practicing his profession. The ture, this is not wholly true. Few ideas presented in it are not new; realize "organic" architecture had the book contains nothing Wright its beginiings in the late 19th cen- has not stated previously in his tury under the hand of another books or lectures. It contains none leas well-known asehitect. Wrinht of the close analyses of American himself never received a degree in civilization present in Genius and architecture; the closest he ever the Mobocracy and The Future of came was a course in civil engi- Architeture nor does it examine neers g at the University of Wis- the material sofbuilding as close- cousin. However, Wright had no ly as did The Natural House. desire to be an engineer. In his Basically, A Testament is an senior year he left school and went to Chicago to look for a job with an architectural firm. It was there that he met and worked for Louis Sullivan, undoubtedly the great- est architect of the period. WRIGHT WORK-The latest achievement of the noted architect Though H H. Richardson had is located near 7 Mile Road in Detroit. Says author Stollman, "it hinted at it with his Marshall leaks, but it wouldn't be a Wright house unless it did." Field Department Store in 1885, it was Sullivan who first originated freedom. Wright soon realized that way of looking at it. The history the idea of "organic" as applied to what "Lieber Meister," Wright's of architecture simply had been a architecture. He was sickened by name for Sullivan, was suggesting search for this truth - democracy the restatement of classical and was not just a possible solution to offering the first real opportunity renaissance themes. He wanted an the problem of the meaning of to bring it into concrete, physical architecture that was distinctly architecture. It was the only solu- form. 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