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Taliesin | Favorite Architecture

Taliesin  was an early Brythonic poet of Sub-Roman Britain whose work has possibly survived in a Middle Welsh manuscript, the Book of Taliesin. Taliesin was a renowned bard who is believed to have sung at the courts of at least three Brythonic kings.Ifor Williams identified eleven of the medieval poems ascribed to Taliesin as possibly originating as early as the sixth century, and so possibly being composed by a historical Taliesin. The bulk of this work praises King Urien of Rheged and his son Owain mab Urien, although several of the poems indicate that he also served as the court bard to King Brochfael Ysgithrog of Powys and his successor Cynan Garwyn, either before or during his time at Urien’s court. Some of the events to which the poems refer, such as the Battle of Arfderydd (c. 573), are referred to in other sources,More info:wiki

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#10   Taliesin,More info:franklloydwright

Originally settled by his maternal family, Wright had spent several summers farming the land that he purchased for Taliesin. His love for the setting can be felt in the home he created, which would serve him for the rest of his life. Following family custom, he gave the site a Welsh name, “Taliesin” (pronounced Tally-ESS-in), which means “shining brow.” The name symbolized Wright’s intention to create a home that was “of the hill,” not on it. Taliesin was therefore built below the hillcrest, on its brow rather than its crown. Regarded as one of Wright’s most significant expressions of Prairie-style organic architecture, the house uses local materials to echo the expansiveness of the Wisconsin landscape with a layout that the architect described as “low, wide, and snug.” Local farmers helped Wright move stone from the yellow limestone quarry nearby, which he then mixed with sand from the river to create Taliesin’s walls. Plaster for the interior walls was mixed with sienna, providing a golden hue reflective of the pastoral setting. Taliesin features many architectural elements that became Wright’s trademarks: the cantilever roofs, wide windows and an open floor plan.

#9   Inside look at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West,More info:azbigmedia

 

#8    Take a 360° Virtual Tour of Taliesin, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Personal Home & Studio,More info:openculture

You can learn a lot about an architect from looking at the buildings they designed, and you can learn even more by looking at the buildings they lived in, but you can learn the most of all from Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin. For that best-known of all American architects, this house stands still today not just as his home but as one of his notable works, and as the studio in which he designed other notable works (including Fallingwater). Wright’s enthusiasts make pilgrimages out to Spring Green, Wisconsin to pay their respects to this singular house on a hill, which offers tours from May through October.

For those less inclined toward architectural pilgrimages, we have this HD 360-degree “virtual visit” of Taliesin (also known as Taliesin East since 1937, when Wright built a Taliesin West in Scottsdale, Arizona). “The center of Frank Lloyd Wright’s world was Taliesin East,” write the online tour’s developers. “It was his home, workshop, architectural laboratory and inspiration for nearly all his life.” In the comfort of your web browser, you can “experience what he saw daily, surrounded by Asian art, expansive views of Wisconsin’s rolling hills, his own courtyard gardens and a space to relax before a fire watched over by a portrait of his mother.”

#7   Taliesin West-credit Foskett Creative Courtesy of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation 1,More info:franklloydwright

 

#6   Petroglyphs at Taliesin West,More info:franklloydwright

In 2016, Stuart Graff, president & CEO of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, reached out to me with an interesting proposition for a collaborative endeavor. No, it had nothing to do with the common last name, but everything to do with an interest shared between myself, Frank Lloyd Wright, and the Foundation’s staff — petroglyphs.

Technically speaking, petroglyphs are human-made figurative impressions in stone. The term, however, is used most often by anthropologists and archaeologists when referring to the pictorial works of societies who share (or shared) knowledge through oral traditions rather than formal writing. Petroglyphs are generally studied within a broader subject of stone-oriented visual culture sometimes called “rock art,” which includes pictographs (paintings on stone) and geoglyphs (designs on the earth surface created by the selective placement or removal of stones).

#5  Taliesin ,More info:wmf

 

#4   Taliesin West Tour and Symposium,More info:modernphoenix

The first day of the Docomomo_Us National Symposium on Modernism and Climate featured a two-hour freefom tour of Taliesin West, with remarks by Stuart Graff and Gunny Harboe, and a light supper on the terrace at sunset.

#3 Inside the Fiery Massacre at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin Estate,More info:thedailybeast

 

#2   Go on a Virtual Tour of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin East,More info:archdaily

 

#1   Your Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West,More info:tripsavvy

 

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