Frank Lloyd Wright
Klincksieck, Paris, 2012; originally published 1912, English
Nonfiction, Architecture
13.4 x 9.9 inches, hardcover, 144 pages
ISBN: 9782252038673
Suggested Retail Price: $185.00

From the Publisher. The influence that Japan—as well as its culture and architecture—exerted on the celebrated American architect Frank Lloyd Wright is most evident in his own creations. Unlike his contemporaries in the United States who viewed European architecture as part of their heritage, Wright chose Japan and the Japanese culture as his aesthetic model. This influence was also reflected in his collections of art objects, sculptures and, above all, prints. In 1906, he displayed his ukiyo-e woodblock print collection at an exhibition of Hiroshige’s works held at the Art Institute of Chicago. He had begun assembling the prints a year earlier, during his first trip to Japan. As one of the pioneer collectors of such works in the West, and an astute art dealer, he immediately developed an interpretive theory which he published 100 years ago (1912)—The Japanese Print: An Interpretation. The book became a fundamental reference work for experts and amateurs of Japanese art and for anyone seriously striving to understand Wright's architecture.

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