Guggenheim Museum

A Long-Awaited Tribute

27 Jul 2012 - 25 Sep 2013

Frank Lloyd Wright and David Henken reviewing architectural drawings for the pavilion, 1953.
Photo: © Pedro E. Guerrero
A LONG-AWAITED TRIBUTE:
Frank Lloyd Wright's Usonian House and Pavilion
27 July 2012 – 25 September 2013

On October 22, 1953, Sixty Years of Living Architecture: The Work of Frank Lloyd Wright opened in New York on the site where the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum would eventually be built. Two Frank Lloyd Wright-designed buildings were constructed specifically to house the exhibition: a temporary pavilion made of glass, fiberboard, and pipe columns; and a 1,700-square-foot, fully furnished, two-bedroom, model Usonian house representing Wright’s organic solution for modest, middle-class dwellings.

This presentation, comprised of selected materials from the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Archives, pays homage to these two structures. Aware of his lack of architectural recognition in New York City prior to the 1953 exhibition, Wright declared: “this house and the pavilion alongside it . . . represent a long-awaited tribute: the first Wright building[s] erected in New York City.”1

1. Frank Lloyd Wright, The Usonian House: Souvenir of the Exhibition, 60 Years of Living Architecture, the Work of Frank Lloyd Wright (New York: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1953), p. 4.
 

Tags: Frank Lloyd Wright