Frank Lloyd Wright, the American...
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Frank Lloyd Wright, the American architect, once said, "I still believe that the ideal of an organic architecture forms the origin and source, the strength and, fundamentally, the significance of everything ever worthy of the name of architecture. By organic architecture I mean an architecture that develops from within outward in harmony with the conditions of its being as distinguished from one that is applied from without."1 Of his house at Bear Run, Pennsylvania, called "Falling Water" it has been said, "In this house ... one sees intersecting planes, predominantly horizontal, and feels the continuity of space, the reaching of the interior out into its environment, with enough contrast to provide vitality."2 While these thoughts are applied to physical architecture they bear relevance to our spiritual architecture and construction as well.
1. Gardner, Helen, Art Through the Ages, pg. 708 (Harcourt, Brace and company, Inc. New York, 1948).
2. Ibid, pg. 709.
- Bond
1. Gardner, Helen, Art Through the Ages, pg. 708 (Harcourt, Brace and company, Inc. New York, 1948).
2. Ibid, pg. 709.
- Bond
