Frank Lloyd Wright: Art Glass of the Martin House Complex

Frank Lloyd Wright: Art Glass of the Martin House Complex
Description
A. Perrone said Insight into the craft, design & theory of wrights art glass.. Nicely put together publication. Makes you want to visit the Martin house. You come away realizing how important the art glass of Wright was to the overall design of his buildings during this period.. Beautiful book! Great addition to your FLW library.. Cheaper price. Kpuddy As expected. Much cheaper through Amazon.
Edited by Martin House curator Eric Jackson-Forsberg, with additional text by Theodore Lownie, Robert McCarter, and Jack Quinan and an introduction by art glass expert Julie Sloan, Frank Lloyd Wright: Art Glass of the Martin House Complex explores the breadth of Wright's iconic iridescent creations for the Martin House. Despite the site-specific nature of Wright's art glass, nearly three-quarters of the pieces at the Martin House complex have been removed--many of them distributed to museums and private collections throughout the world. Full-color images accompany Jackson-Forsberg's insightful text to provide examples of the major patterns and motifs represented in the Martin House, in addition to an assortment of rare variations and outlying designs. Today, due to the tremendous reconstruction efforts by the Martin House Restoration Corporation, the art glass designs are being rest
Martin House Visitors' Center Competition(University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning, 2005). Martin House (2008) and On Wright: Frank Lloyd Wright's Darwin D. As Martin House Curator, he has contributed to various publications, including a Historic Furnishings Report for the Darwin D. About the Author Eric Jackson-Forsberg is curator for the Martin House Restoration Corporation and an adjunct professor of art history at Canisius College, Buffalo, New York.
Martin House (2008) and On Wright: Frank Lloyd Wright's Darwin D. As Martin House Curator, he has contributed to various publications, including a Historic Furnishings Report for the Darwin D. . Martin House Visitors' Center Competition(University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning, 2005). Eric J