Get WPC Daily Every Morning! WPC's Community Gardens Peregrine Falcon News Fallingwater WPC's Conservation Programs Sustainable Farmland
September 22, 2005     First Day of Autumn - Destination Thursday

Fallingwater Conceived 70 Years Ago Today

"E.J., we've been waiting for you!" was Frank Lloyd Wright's greeting to Edgar Kaufmann, Sr., upon arriving at Wright's Wisconsin studio - Taliesin - on September 22, 1935. Kaufmann had also been waiting - more than nine months - to see Wright's ideas for a new country lodge at Bear Run. Since Wright's site visit the year before, both architect and client had been dreaming about what kind of house could grace this forest property with its cascading mountain stream. Wright's dreams were large, and the result surprised and delighted the forward-thinking Kaufmann: a house perched OVER a 20 foot waterfall.

Wright's apprentices describe the "birth" of this major commission as surprisingly fast. According to Edgar Tafel, Kaufmann was already on the road from Milwaukee to Taliesin before Wright actually sat down at the drafting table. "The design just poured out of him. Pencils were used up as fast as we could sharpen them," he has recalled. In about two hours, Wright drew at least two preliminary drawings, ready when Kaufmann arrived. Although less detailed than in Wright's subsequent drawings, the basic design ideas expressed in these early sketches changed little, from conception to construction.

In a 1940s essay for the Museum of Modern Art, Edgar Kaufmann described his fascination with the early drawings, confessing he did not readily understand Wright's intentions. It was only as he walked the site later with his family, drawings in hand, that "a new vision of the house grew upon me." For Kaufmann it was his "first lesson in organic architecture," and the beginning of a long relationship with the architect, best summarized in the essay's title: "To Meet - To Know - To Battle - To Love - Frank Lloyd Wright."

Pictured today are Wright and his apprentices at Taliesin, from the January, 1938 issue of “Architectural Forum.” To the far right are Wes Peters (leaning on drafting table), Bob Mosher, and Edgar Tafel (behind Mosher), the apprentices who worked at Fallingwater. Mr. Tafel visited Fallingwater last month (8/27/2005) for the Fallingwater Twilight Tour.

Photo courtesy Chicago Historical Society, Hedrich-Blessing, HB-04414-H.

See a Robert Ruschak photo of Fallingwater in the Fall.
Visit Fallingwater.


Read the latest
e-CONSERVE

Get our free October Screen Calendar

Explore the more than 786 Morning Tidbits

Our screensaver blends
nature and science

The Fallingwater Museum Shop has Fall gift ideas

E-mail Today's WPC Daily to a Friend!

Friend's e-mail address:
Your Message:

Sign Up for the WPC Morning Tidbit

Play "How Well Do You Know Your Western Pa. Trees?"
Play "How Well Do You Know Your Western Pa. Birds?"