First, it must be said that contents of this book leave almost nothing to be desired. There are excellent photographs and Wright's drawings are reproduced on a rarely seen scale - there are drawings for most verified projects. Printing and presentation is beautiful. The only criticism I have is the inclusion of some projects done in Louis Sullivan's office that cannot be attributed to Wright with certainty. These projects - including Sullivan's now-vanished summer house in Ocean Springs, MS and the house designed for Louis Sullivan's brother Albert in Chicago - are considered Sullivan's work by some historians. The Albert Sullivan house has a strong Sullivan decorative aesthetic that does not appear in Wright's work. Of course, Wright was Sullivan's employee, but his role is not always clear. The author also appropriately credits Marion Mahony's participation on some projects.
This title deals with the Wright stuff. This is the definitive publication on America's greatest architect. Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) is widely considered to be the greatest American architect of all time; indeed, his work virtually ushered in the modern era and remains highly influential today. His wide-ranging and paradigm-shifting oeuvre is the subject of Taschen's three-volume monograph that covers all of his designs (numbering approximately 1100), both realized and unrealized. Made in cooperation with the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives in Taliesin, Arizona, this collection leaves no stone unturned in examining and paying tribute to Wright's life and work. From his early Prairie Houses (typified by the Robie House) to the Usonian concept home and progressive 'living architecture' buildings to late projects like the spiral Guggenheim Museum in New York and the development of his fantastic vision of a better tomorrow via his concept of the 'living city', all of the phases of Wright's career are painstakingly described and illustrated herein. Volume 1 covers the early Chicago years and the Prairie Houses, the period which provoked a profound influence on European architects. Wright's architectural work during these early years was mostly residential, as it would be throughout his career, and from his earliest work, Frank Lloyd Wright demonstrated a knowledge of and respect for natural materials. In the ten years between 1896 and 1906, he developed and perfected the so-called 'prairie house'. Wright believed the architect should have complete charge of architectural design, and for him this meant interior furnishings as well as exterior landscape. The 1908 Avery Coonley residence, the administration building for the Larkin Soap Company (1903-1905), and the Unity Temple (1905) are examples of major works from the period.