Health & Fitness
The Home Guru: Visiting with Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright is considered the master of contemporary, "organic" American architecture and, locally, his influence is felt strongly, as in the Alfred Bush House in Croton-on-Hudson.
When I was a youngster, “The Secret” hadn’t been written yet, so I didn’t know anything about making my intentions known to the universe to attract what I wanted. But I guess the dynamic worked anyway, judging from several instances where unwittingly I called upon its power and it worked for me.
For instance, as an adolescent, I loved Dinah Shore and her TV show where she would sing, “See the USA in your Chevrolet” and throw a big puckered kiss to the camera at the end of her show. Gee, I thought, I’d sure like to meet her someday.
Incredibly enough, some 25 years later, I found myself as a guest in her Beverly Hills home at a dinner table with her and some of her good friends, including Gregory and Veronique Peck, Gene Kelly, Billy Wilder, Angie Dickinson, Willie Nelson and Morgan Fairchild. I was in star stalkers heaven!
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And when I was in college in one of my Art History courses, I remember the day that the “father” of American architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright, died. My professor devoted the entire class to his achievements as the greatest architect of his day, or likely any day, for creating organic architecture where buildings and homes are designed and built in harmony with humanity and their environment.
Interested as I was in architecture, I thought, wow, wouldn’t it be nice to be rich enough someday to live in one of the houses he designed! Well, that dream was not turned into realty, but last week I became close to Wright by as little as two degrees as I listed a home in Croton-on-Hudson that was built by his apprentice, Alfred Bush.
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Bush, I learned from his two children, Jessica and Eric who are executors of his estate, was an individualist of the first order, traveling the globe to create housing for the poor, developing as an artist, dancing with Martha Graham and having the distinction of modeling as Atlas for the sculpture used at Rockefeller Center. How’s that for provenance!
The home he built in 1962 shows his individuality by attaching to a basic Wright design a double parabolic roof that Wright himself never used. A Frank Lloyd Wright authority who visited the house at my invitation put it this way: “Bush was tutored and influenced by Wright, but he was not a copyist.”
Sitting majestically on a hill at the highest point of the almost four acre property, the Bush House is constructed of stone, wood and concrete blown into wire forms, allowing it to undulate and curve organically. And combined with angled roof appendages, it looks as though it’s about to take flight from a precipice.
Its design seems to defy gravity, but nevertheless has as intimate a relationship to the knoll on which it sits as did Wright’s most notably designed house, Fallingwater, near Pittsburgh. When he showed the plans for that house to his clients, they were surprised that, rather than being positioned to have a good view of a 30 ft. waterfall on the property, the house was actually designed over the waterfall, to become part of it.
While the home in Croton enjoys an almost unworldly aesthetic, the unvarnished truth of the matter is that it requires some serious, very worldly rehabilitation. It’s a job that is not for the faint hearted. It will probably appeal to an architect, engineer or builder who wants to relish a project as a labor of love. It helps that the property can be subdivided for new construction of another house.
My wonderful professor loved to tell the back stories of every subject we explored, and I was transfixed by a macabre story about Wright. In 1914, a mass murder of seven people took place in his Taliesin home in Wisconsin which had served as a love nest for him and his mistress, when they were both married to other people.
One evening when he was away, a servant went berserk, setting the house on fire, and when its occupants ran through the nearest exit to escape the flames, he was on the other side of the door and hacked each of them with a hatchet.
Surely that horrific event must have shaped the rest of his life and his life’s work.
To see a video about Wright’s protégé and his extraordinary home, visit www.YouTube.com, and search for “Alfred Bush.”
Bill Primavea is a Realtor® associated with Coldwell Banker, as well as a marketer and journalist who writes weekly for Patch as The Home Guru. For questions about home maintenance or for anyone who wants to buy or sell a house, he can be reached at Bill@TheHomeGuru.com or called directly at 914-522-2076