Date: Fri 11-Jun-1999
Date: Fri 11-Jun-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Wright-architect-Niedecken
Full Text:
AA LEAD: Designing In The Wright Style
(with cuts)
LEXINGTON, MASS. -- Frank Lloyd Wright is the best known of all American
architects, but his integrated designs for home furnishings were not the
product of his vision alone. From the turn of the century through World War I,
he collaborated with George Mann Niedecken, a Milwaukee painter and interior
designer. The Museum of Our National Heritage is surveying the work produced
by these two artists in "Designing in the Wright Style: Furniture and
Interiors by Frank Lloyd Wright and George Mann Niedecken," on view through
September 6.
"Designing in the Wright Style," curated by Cheryl Robertson, director of
exhibitions and public programs at the museum, addresses the design
collaborations between Wright and Niedecken in the years 1904 to 1918,
Wright's celebrated "Prairie Style" years. Their kinship grew from their
mutual commitment to simplicity, honest materials and decoration derived from
nature.
The exhibition examines several independent commissions by each designer. It
also looks at their respective contributions to five Wright homes inspired by
the Midwestern prairies, including the famed Avery Coonley and Frederick Robie
residences built from 1907-10 in the Chicago area. Furnishings from the three
houses for Meyer May, Edward Irving and Frederick Bogk have seldom been
exhibited, never before in New England.
More than 175 drawings and examples of custom-made furniture, stained glass,
carpets and decorative arts, as well as delicate watercolors, period photos
and vintage books showing the interiors are on display. The exhibition is
drawn largely from the extensive Prairie Archives of the Milwaukee Art Museum,
with loans from the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, the Frank Lloyd Wright
Foundation, and other public and private collections also on view. Examples of
several key objects in the exhibition are a copy of The House Beautiful , a
book illustrated by Wright and hand-printed in 1896-97 in a limited edition of
90; a Wright barrel chair, circa 1900; a combination library
table-desk-bookcase-couch of Niedecken's design, made for the Irving residence
in 1911; and a Bogk carpet Wright designed and Niedecken had manufactured in
1917, a great rarity because very few of the architect's Prairie-style rug
schemes were ever realized.
Since 1981 when Robertson mounted the retrospective "The Domestic Scene
(1897-1927): George M. Niedecken, Interior Architect" at the Milwaukee Art
Museum, Niedecken has become recognized as a significant Prairie School
designer. He was working intermittently in Wright's studio by 1904, when he
painted and signed the landscape mural encircling the dining room of the Dana
House in Springfield, Ill. A watercolor study of that extraordinary
sumac-and-wildflower mural is displayed in the exhibition, along with a unique
Niedecken mural on canvas featuring a related sumac-and-birch design.
By 1907, when Niedecken established an independent interior decoration firm,
his part in the furnishing of holistic Wright interiors was expanding rapidly.
Besides designing and painting a fern-and-birch mural for the Coonley living
room, Niedecken was entrusted with the fabrication and installation of custom
carpets, embroidered textiles and upholstered furniture. Coonley rug designs
by Wright and Niedecken will be on view along with an original color chart of
still vibrant yarn samples. The exhibition includes bedroom as well as living
room furniture for the Coonley, Robie and May residences.
One section of the exhibition is devoted to Niedecken's independent interior
designs, which show influence of his education in Europe. He was a student of
the Art Nouveau poster artist Alphonse Mucha and also studied the avant-garde
decorative designs of the Secession artists in Germany and Austria. A
spectacular suite of curly birch reception-room furniture designed by
Niedecken in 1904-7 is featured in the exhibition.
In conjunction with the exhibition, curator Cheryl Robertson has written a
catalogue about the relationship between Wright and Niedecken and the
furnishings they provided for the five houses highlighted in the exhibition.
Frank Lloyd Wright and George Mann Niedecken: Prairie School Collaborators is
available for $18.95 in the museum's Heritage Shop and by mail (add $3.50 for
shipping).
The Museum of Our National Heritage is presenting exhibitions on a wide
variety of topics in American history and popular culture. The Museum is
supported by the Scottish Rite Freemasons in the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction
of the United States.
The Museum of Our National Heritage is at 33 Marrett Road in Lexington at the
corner of Route 2A and Massachusetts Avenue. Hours are Monday through Saturday
from 10 am-5 pm, and Sunday, noon-5 pm. Admission is free. Telephone
781/861-6559.