Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Jacobs House, Middleton, Wisconsin, Perspective

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Jacobs House, Middleton, Wisconsin, Perspective

Frank Lloyd WrightWW-1944-048046
1944·Ink on paper with graphite guidelines·58.1 × 73.5 cm (22 7/8 × 28 15/16 in.)

<p>The leading figure of the Prairie school of architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright continued to innovate into his seventies. With the Herbert A. Jacobs House, he began a series of curved designs that were specifically constructed for the particular topographical character of a site in order to take advantage of solar energy. Wright had designed the Jacobs family’s former residence near Madison, Wisconsin; however, they wished to escape congestion and thus enlisted him to design a second home further out in the country. In this perspective view, Wright emphasized the home’s innovative features by depicting it at midday. Direct sunlight casts a bold swath of inky black shadow that dramatizes the interior curve of the building’s semicircular design. The south facade bends around a circular sunken garden. Large windows and glass doors welcome the weak winter sun while the wide, overhanging roof shields against summer’s direct rays. To protect from strong winds and to insulate the home, the house was set into a berm. The thick masonry walls that flank the facade link the building to its natural setting while offering a textural contrast to the glass front and airy interior.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1944
Dimensions
58.1 × 73.5 cm (22 7/8 × 28 15/16 in.)

Artist

Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright

Frank Lloyd Wright was an American architect whose designs fundamentally reshaped residential and civic building in the twentieth century. He developed the concept of organic architecture, integrating structures with their natural surroundings through innovative use of cantilevers, open floor plans, and locally sourced materials. His projects ranged from the Prairie School houses of Chicago to Fallingwater in Pennsylvania and the Guggenheim Museum in New York, each demonstrating a conviction that buildings should grow from their sites rather than impose upon them. His influence extends across modernism, landscape integration, and spatial planning.

Chicago, IL, USA

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1944
Dimensions
58.1 × 73.5 cm (22 7/8 × 28 15/16 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1944-048046

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Frank Lloyd Wright

Frank Lloyd Wright

View artist profile →