
Today was a lot more laid back than yesterday was. First off, we did not have to drive six hours. Today’s featured facility came with a guided tour, and its environment was generally more relaxed than that of House on the Rock. We had to travel only a few miles down the road from House on the Rock to see Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin. He named his home Taliesin to honor his Welsh roots, translated it means furrowed brow and trumpets his belief that a building should not be built atop a hill, but on its forehead. He lived and worked on this property for fifty years, until his death in 1959. It burned twice and when he wasn’t rebuilding it from fire, he was changing it to meet his current needs, which were constantly evolving.
Dale our guide led us 24 tour members for four hours through many of the buildings that are the Taliesin complex, because that is how many seats were on the bus. After four hours, our tour ended at the brow of the hill. The site is under constant restoration. The current hot project is Wright’s bedroom, which is in danger of sliding off the hill. He began working on Taliesin at the beginning of the 20th-century, but the restoration’s goal is what it looked like in 1959. From a preservation point of view, you have to pick a specific date, because the place was always changing. I mentioned yesterday that Wright insulted his neighbor Alex Jordan, by telling him that he would not trust Jordan to build a chicken coup. I saw his chicken coups after they had been repurposed into cabins for his students. Wright might have had a point.
Taliesin is where he designed most of his signature works, from the Guggenheim Museum to Falling Water. One story that we were told was about Falling Water. Nine months after receiving this commission, Wright got a surprise phone call from the client. The client was in Madison and was about to board a train to come visit Wright and review his design. The train ride was two-and-a-half hours. Wright had not put anything on paper. Once off the phone, he summoned all of his students and instructed them to keep feeding him sharpened pencils. Drafting like crazy, strictly from memory, he had the design ready to present when his client stepped off the train.
Wow, Thai is so interesting, I never knew the back story of Taliesin and Wright .
I’d love to see it