Stephen, the bell tower is Wright... still surmise the door was added later, maybe due to AC?SDR wrote: ↑Fri Jan 15, 2021 12:37 pmIs Jim correct in surmising that the bell-tower door might be post-Wright ? Sorry that my familiarity with TW history isn't what it could be . . .Not to be utterly pedantic, but two of the doors are irregular hexagons, the other two irregular pentagons---I believe.S
Taliesin West
Re: Taliesin West
Re: Taliesin West
Jim sent a classic Pedro Guerrero photo of the Bell Tower at T West.

Here are three photos of the Living Room; a door is seen at the far wall in two (?) of them.


photos © Pedro Guerrero

photo courtesy Peter Maunu

Here are three photos of the Living Room; a door is seen at the far wall in two (?) of them.


photos © Pedro Guerrero

photo courtesy Peter Maunu
"As a former copy editor, I always feel I am defending the person whose name is being misspelled, not attacking the person who misspells it." Ronald Alan McCrea (1943-2019)
Re: Taliesin West
perfect I meant this door ... did you happen to see any drawings?
Re: Taliesin West
No. But there is this 1950 photo of the Garden Room (also called the living room ?) showing the large door. This seems to be a persistent feature; have we seen that door open, in any photo ?

Further photos: Wright's office, photographed in 1951 by Ezra Stoller, shows one opening with no door (yet), and in the foreground another door in the open position.

Here's a photo, also by Stoller, of the passage at the Cabaret Theater, where to maximize the clear opening the bottom of the door has had to be bent:

The only drawings I found are building sections. One of them shows a door opening. All of the images seen in this post are found in Taschen II.




Further photos: Wright's office, photographed in 1951 by Ezra Stoller, shows one opening with no door (yet), and in the foreground another door in the open position.

Here's a photo, also by Stoller, of the passage at the Cabaret Theater, where to maximize the clear opening the bottom of the door has had to be bent:

The only drawings I found are building sections. One of them shows a door opening. All of the images seen in this post are found in Taschen II.



"As a former copy editor, I always feel I am defending the person whose name is being misspelled, not attacking the person who misspells it." Ronald Alan McCrea (1943-2019)
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Re: Taliesin West
Under the stairs next to the bell tower is (or was) a space where vegetables were kept on a large open concrete shelf with a perpetual spray of water keeping the veggies cold and fresh. Details like that are what made T-West magical. Many of the alterations over the years seem to have tried to civilize what was basically a Neolithic camp, turning it into a suburban house.
Re: Taliesin West
I would have a jpeg image of the open door but forgive me I can not insert it ..
Re: Taliesin West
Capie, you can send a jpeg to me if you like, and I'll post it . . .
S
S
"As a former copy editor, I always feel I am defending the person whose name is being misspelled, not attacking the person who misspells it." Ronald Alan McCrea (1943-2019)
Re: Taliesin West
Love the thread.
Re: Taliesin West
. . . or you could sign on to a web host, who will provide your images with the URLs they need to be visible on the Internet.
The Dobkins house thread linked elsewhere here today is filled with images Dan C sent me for posting . . .
S
The Dobkins house thread linked elsewhere here today is filled with images Dan C sent me for posting . . .
S
"As a former copy editor, I always feel I am defending the person whose name is being misspelled, not attacking the person who misspells it." Ronald Alan McCrea (1943-2019)