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Illinois Issues Summer Book Section
By MARK HEYMAN
Meryle Secrest. Frank Lloyd Wright:
A Biography. New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 1992. Pp. 634 with 121 illustrations, notes and index. $30 (cloth).
Frank Lloyd Wright has no competitors as "America's foremost
architect" when either the public or architects are polled. Unfortunately, his work is less understood than
it is admired. Dramatic, idiosyncratic
Fallingwater and the Guggenheim Museum are well known, but Wright's 70-year professional practice was dominated by commissions for houses for 400
mostly middle-class families in 37
states. One scholar, Morris Kelly Smith
of Washington University in St. Louis,
argues that Wright "has suffered, perhaps more than any other artist of our
time, from being overpraised and underestimated."
Wright's place in history is assured,
and exactly why this is so interests
many, including Meryle Secrest, a biographer of artists and art historians. Five
years of research have culminated in
her well-written narration of an eventful life that spanned half of two centuries: Wright was born in 1867, two years
after the end of the Civil War, and died
in 1959, two years after the launching
of Sputnik, the first earth satellite. This
biography will attract his fans; others
will enjoy a life story that reads like a
romance novel.
From numerous interviews, the ar-
32/July 1993/Illinois Issues
chitect's archive of 100,000 letters,
manuscripts and documents, and the
extensive literature on Wright, Secrest
has produced an epic drama with few
detours into tedious detail. Important
among the personalities portrayed are
Wright's mother, his three wives and his
ill-fated companion, Mamah Cheney.
The subject's personality forms the
core of any biography, but for those
who knew Wright, some important aspects of his persona are missing in this
portrait. One is his single-minded devotion to his art; he enjoyed nothing more
than exercising his immense talents,
and talking and writing about his architectural philosophy. An appreciation of
his dedication is necessary to understand his sometimes troubled relationships with family members and clients.
Regarding the latter group, his goals
were not always theirs; he would
change a design, on paper or during
construction, whenever he saw an opportunity for improvement. But even if
the project didn't go smoothly, causing
delays and cost overruns, most clients
were enchanted with the result. Some
returned to Wright for a second house,
and a few for a third. No wonder he
thought highly of his clients.
Another overlooked aspect of Wright's
personality is a durable optimism that
enabled him to weather adversity. In the
Depression, with debts and no commissions, he invited young admirers to live
and work with him in rural Wisconsin if
they paid for their room and board, and
even accepted some who didn't have
the $600. At 65, Wright was confident
that his practice would once again
flourish. Trained by their master, the
early acolytes plus later apprentices
(some 400 in 27 years) made the construction drawings for Wright's designs
during his most productive years, from
the age of 68 to his death at 92. With
the help of apprentices, the architect
designed and supervised two hundred
"Usonian" houses, the Johnson Wax
buildings, Fallingwater, the Guggenheim and various churches, schools and
medical clinics.
Secrest does not dwell at length on
Wright's architecture. This allows her
to play to her strengths, which are narration and exploration of personalities.
She relies on historians and critics for
assessments of his work. Unfortunately,
this does not produce a coherent view of
his art, nor does it deal with the possible
relationship of his work to his personal
life.
For example, Secrest analyzes
Wright's Oak Park home but neglects
the equally important adjoining studio.
The complex served as an architectural
laboratory that Wright remodeled almost continuously for 20 years as his
family's needs changed and his professional vision evolved. In another instance, Springfield's Dana-Thomas
house, one of the most lavish of his
designs, is included in Secrest's discussion of buildings that have been close to
demolition, but because she ends the
account with the 1943 auction of Mrs.
Dana's effects, Charles Thomas's subsequent stewardship of the house and its
restoration by the state of Illinois are
missing.
A more serious challenge can be
made to Secrest's foray into psychobiography. Undocumented anecdotes and
several letters from his mother convince
Secrest that Wright had a "ruthless Old
Testament conscience lurking behind
his apparent veneer of breezy self-confidence" and that there was an "insecurity behind the shield that Wright
had successfully erected between himself and the world." Wright's legendary
self-confidence masked "a secret conviction of worthlessness" and an "inner
conviction of being a confidence artist,
a trickster, all surface and no substance." Few, if any, of the people who
were close to him relatives, clients
and apprentices would accept this
interpretation. A more reasonable explanation of Frank Lloyd Wright's self-confidence is the obvious one: he was
extraordinarily good at what he did and
he knew it. It is true that his mother was
overbearing and everpresent, but so
were the mothers of FDR and General
MacArthur. Some powerful mothers
have powerful sons.
Mark Heyman, emeritus professor of city
planning at Sangamon State University, was
one of Frank Lloyd Wright's apprentices from
1954 to 1959.
July 1993/Illinois Issues/33 |
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