:The National Building Museum will present a comprehensive
exhibition celebrating the 50th anniversary of the completion of
Frank Lloyd Wright's only skyscraper - the Price Tower in
Bartlesville, Okla., of 1956. "Prairie Skyscraper: Frank Lloyd
Wright's Price Tower," opening June 17, will examine the
evolution of Wright's concept of the modern office building, from
the Larkin Building in Buffalo, N.Y., and the Johnson Wax
Administration Building and Research Tower in Racine, Wis., to
the Price Tower itself - which is hailed by architect Tadao Ando
as "one of the most important buildings of the Twentieth
Century."
The Price Tower won the American Institute of Architect's 25-Year
award for its enduring architectural design, and is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. The exhibition will be on
view through September 17.
In its three-month stay in the museum's second-floor galleries,
the exhibition will feature approximately 108 drawings, models,
photographs, documents, building components (such as exterior
copper panels and louvers) and furnishings. The latter objects -
desks, chairs, tables and textiles designed for the Price Tower
by Frank Lloyd Wright - keep with Wright's conception of the
building as an integrated work of art. This traveling exhibition
comes to the museum from the collection of Price Tower Arts
Center in Bartlesville and from the archives of the Frank Lloyd
Wright Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Originally conceived as a residential tower in lower Manhattan,
the concept for the 19-story, 37,000-square-foot Price Tower was
further developed in the 1930s as a component of Broadacre City.
It was finally constructed as a multiuse, high-rise tower that
would serve as the corporate headquarters for H.C. Price Company,
incorporating office, retail and residential space. The iconic
building was designed to resemble a tree in form and function,
with branchlike, cantilevered floors that "broke the box" of
conventional construction.
"Prairie Skyscraper" will showcase Wright's ideal of integrating
office, commercial and residential space within a single
structure and reflect the unconventional approach to design that
makes him America's preeminent architect. The exhibition will
also highlight this take on America's quintessential building
type - the skyscraper - and the imaginatively designed, detailed
and furnished environment created by Wright for his last
masterpiece of urban architecture.
The exhibition installation has been designed by Zaha Hadid and
Office of Zaha Hadid, London, and co-produced by Price Tower Arts
Center and Yale University Art + Architecture Gallery. "Prairie
Skyscraper" was curated by Anthony Alofsin, a scholar of Frank
Lloyd Wright and professor of architecture at the University of
Texas. Assisting him was former Price Tower Arts Center curator
Monica Ramirez-Montagut, now assistant curator at the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum in New York, and Richard P. Townsend, executive
director and CEO of Price Tower Arts Center.
Accompanying the exhibition is an illustrated catalog featuring
150 color illustrations plus major essays.
To complement "Prairie Skyscraper," the museum will offer a host
of educational programs. On Saturday, June 17, from 10 am to 4:30
pm, the museum will hold a "A Towering Challenge," during which
visitors can watch the construction of a giant KEVA block tower
and see if this year's creation will beat the record (51 feet)
set at the museum in 2003, as confirmed by the Guinness Book
of World Records.
On Monday, June 19, from 6:30 to 8 pm, Anthony Alofsin will
discuss Wright's only skyscraper in a lecture, "Pinwheel on the
Prairie: Frank Lloyd Wright's Price Tower." Admission is $10 for
museum members and students; $15 for nonmembers. Prepaid
registration is required; register online at www.nbm.org or call
202-272-2448.
The museum will offer evening lectures by exhibition curators,
historians and other authorities on Frank Lloyd Wright; and a
variety of drop-in films exploring the connection between Wright
and his work.
The museum is at 401 F Street NW. Admission is free. For
information, 202-272-2448 or www.nbm.org.