首页
登录
职称英语
"Organic Architecture" One of the most striking pers
"Organic Architecture" One of the most striking pers
游客
2024-01-04
22
管理
问题
"Organic Architecture"
One of the most striking personalities in the development of early-twentieth-century architecture was Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959). Wright attended the University of Wisconsin in Madison before moving to Chicago, where he eventually joined the firm headed by Louis Sullivan. Wright set out to create "architecture of democracy." Early influences were the volumetric shapes in a set of educational blocks the German educator Friedrich Froebel designed, the organic unity of a Japanese building Wright saw at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, and a Jeffersonian belief in individualism and populism. Always a believer in architecture as "natural" and "organic," Wright saw it as serving free individuals who have the right to move within a "free" space, envisioned as a nonsymmetrical design interacting spatially with its natural surroundings. He sought to develop an organic unity of planning, structure, materials, and site. Wright identified the principle of continuity as fundamental to understanding his view of organic unity: "Classic architecture was all fixation ....Now why not let walls, ceilings, floors become seen as component parts of each other? ... This ideal, profound in its architectural implications... I called... continuity."
Wright manifested his vigorous originality early, and by 1900 he had arrived at a style entirely his own. In his work during the first decade of the twentieth century, his cross-axial plan and his fabric of continuous roof planes and screens defined a new domestic architecture.
→ Wright fully expressed these elements and concepts in Robie House, built between 1907 and 1909. Like other buildings in the Chicago area he designed at about the same time, this was called a "prairie house." Wright
conceived
the long, sweeping ground-hugging lines, unconfined by abrupt wall limits, as reaching out toward and capturing the expansiveness of the Midwest’s great flatlands.
Abandoning
all symmetry, the architect eliminated a facade, extended the roofs far beyond the walls, and all but concealed the entrance. Wright filled the "wandering" plan of the Robie House with intricately joined spaces (some large and open, others closed), grouped freely around a great central fireplace.A (He believed strongly in the hearth’s age-old domestic significance.) Wright designed enclosed patios, overhanging roofs, and strip windows to provide unexpected light sources and glimpses of the outdoors as people move through the interior space. These elements, together with the open ground plan, create a sense of space-in-motion inside and out.B He set masses and voids in equilibrium; the flow of interior space determined the exterior wall placement. C The exterior’s sharp angular planes meet at apparently odd angles, matching the complex play of interior solids, which function not as inert containing surfaces but as elements equivalent in role to the design’s spaces.D
The Robie House is a good example of Wright’s "naturalism,"
his adjusting
of a building to its site. However, in this particular case, the confines of the city lot constrained the building-to-site relationship more than did the sites of some of Wright’s more expansive suburban and country homes. The Kaufmann House, nicknamed "Fallingwater" and designed as a weekend retreat at Bear Run near Pittsburgh, is a
prime
example of the latter. Perched on a rocky hillside over a small waterfall, this structure extends the Robie House’s blocky masses in all four directions. The contrast in textures between concrete, painted metal, and natural stones in its walls enliven its shapes, as does Wright’s use of full-length strip windows to create a stunning interweaving of interior and exterior space.
→ The implied message of Wright’s new architecture was space, not mass—a space designed to fit the patron’s life and enclosed and divided as required. Wright took special pains to meet his client’s requirements, often designing all the accessories of a house. In the late 1930s, he acted on a cherished dream to provide good architectural design for less prosperous people by adapting the ideas of his prairie house to plans for smaller, less expensive dwellings. The publication of Wright’s plans brought him a measure of fame in Europe, especially in Holland and Germany. The issuance in Berlin in 1910 of a portfolio of his work and an exhibition of his designs the following year stimulated younger architects to adopt some of his ideas about open plans. Some forty years before his career ended, his work was already of revolutionary significance. [br] The phrase his own in the passage refers to
选项
A、style
B、originality
C、work
D、plan
答案
A
解析
"Wright manifested his vigorous originality early, and by 1900 he had arrived at a style entirely his own [style]." The phrase "his own" does not refer to Choices B, C, or D.
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3333365.html
相关试题推荐
GeorgiaO’Keeffeisknownfor(hers)use(of)organic,abstract(forms)painted
(By)theendofthenineteenthcentury,organicchemistryhad(develop)new(met
OrganicArchitectureOneofthemoststrikingpers
OrganicArchitectureOneofthemoststrikingpers
OrganicArchitectureOneofthemoststrikingpers
OrganicArchitectureOneofthemoststrikingpers
OrganicArchitectureOneofthemoststrikingpers
OrganicArchitectureOneofthemoststrikingpers
"OrganicArchitecture"Oneofthemoststrikingpers
"OrganicArchitecture"Oneofthemoststrikingpers
随机试题
PASSAGEONEWesternEurope.第3段第3句utilizing为“使用”的意思,其后的宾语及定语从句表明罗马尼亚玻璃生产商使用了西欧常见的矿
Walking,ifyoudoitvigorouslyenough,istheoverallbestexerciseforreg
InAmericaalone,tippingisnowa$16billion-a-yearindustry.Consumersac
[originaltext]W:Didyoufinishyourcollegewhenyourfatherdiedin1965?M:
给定资料: 韩国的校园安全保障措施很多,主要包括交通安全、食品环境安全、人
伴有心脏功能不全的哮喘急性发作患者,宜选用的药物是( )。A.氨茶碱 B.沙
医疗事故是指医疗机构及其医务人员在医疗活动中,违反医疗卫生管理法律、行政法规、部
位于9度抗震设防区、设计基本地震加速度值为0.40g,设计地震分组为第一组,建筑
现代中医借助西医的物理检验手段,提高传统的“望→闻→问→切→处”的诊断准确性。这
在国家级风景名胜区范围开采矿产资源,应当经()。A.国务院同意 B.国务院授权
最新回复
(
0
)