Digital Exhibit Explores Fay Jones and Frank Lloyd Wright's Legacy of Organic Architecture in Arkansas
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – The University of Arkansas Libraries’ Special Collections and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Library and Archives recently completed a collaborative digital exhibit titled “Fay Jones and Frank Lloyd Wright: Organic Architecture Comes to Arkansas.”
The exhibit documents the development of these two notable architects’ affiliation, the architecture it spawned, the complex social network of Wright’s Taliesin institute, and the lifelong devotion of a student, Jones, to his teacher, Wright. Both men were proponents of “organic architecture” – the harmonious and seamless relationship between the built environment and nature.
The digital exhibit consists of nearly 150 photographs of the architects’ work, families and colleagues; correspondence; lectures; musings and writings; and other media. Charming and insightful personal recollections by Fay Jones’s wife, Gus, can be seen on a video interview produced by the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History.
“With this exhibit, fans of Wright and Jones get a glimpse into their mentor-protégé relationship,” said Timothy G. Nutt, head of Special Collections. Jones’s collection of architectural drawings and models is housed in Special Collections’ Arkansas Architectural Archives.
Team members from Crystal Bridges include Catherine Petersen and Jennifer De Martino. At the University of Arkansas, Janet Parsch coordinated efforts with Jason W. Dean, Angela Fritz, Deb Kulczak, Arthur Morgan, Tim Nutt, Martha Parker and Cat Wallack, project curator. In addition, Gregory Herman, associate professor of architecture in the Fay Jones School of Architecture, advised on the project and contributed an essay on Wright, Jones and organic architecture.
The lives of these two prominent architects – Arkansas native and award-winning architect Fay Jones (1921-2004) and his mentor Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) – intersected for a 10-year time period, beginning in 1949 when Jones almost literally bumped into Wright at the American Institute of Architects’ convention. Wright was there to receive the AIA’s Gold Medal, the highest award in American architecture, given in recognition of a significant body of work of lasting influence on the theory and practice of architecture.
Throughout the next 10 years, until Wright’s death in 1959, Jones and Wright would interact, first at Wright’s institute and design studio called Taliesin, near Spring Green, Wisconsin, where Jones, with family in tow, spent a summer as an architecture apprentice. In 1958, Jones convinced Wright to travel to Northwest Arkansas and present a speech at the University of Arkansas, where Jones taught architecture courses. Later, in 1966, Jones was appointed the first chair of the U of A Architecture Department. The School of Architecture was established in 1974, with Jones serving as its first dean. The school was re-named in honor of Jones in 2009. In 1990, Jones himself received the AIA Gold Medal – the only one of Wright’s disciples to receive this coveted award.
Today, their work and influences still intersect. In 2014, Crystal Bridges acquired one of Wright’s Usonian-designed homes, the Bachman Wilson House, which was threatened by regular flooding of the Millstone River in Millstone, New Jersey. The home is now being re-constructed on the grounds of Crystal Bridges and will open to the public this summer. It will be the only building in Arkansas designed by Wright. Visitors will be able to walk through a pavilion designed and built by students and faculty of the Fay Jones School of Architecture on their way to the home. An interpretive model of the home and Wright’s work, also created by students, is currently on display inside the museum.
The digital exhibit is being released to coincide with what would have been Jones’s 94th birthday on Jan. 31. The “Fay Jones and Frank Lloyd Wright: Organic Architecture Comes to Arkansas” exhibit is available online at the University Libraries digital collections website.
About the University of Arkansas Libraries: The library system of the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, comprises the David W. Mullins Library (the main research facility) and four branch libraries: the Robert A. and Vivian Young Law Library, the Fine Arts Library, the Chemistry and Biochemistry Library, and the Physics Library. The combined holdings of the University Libraries total more than 2 million volumes of books and periodicals and 5.5 million microforms. The Libraries received more than 53,700 serial publications by subscription and gift. Other resources include several thousand maps, numerous pamphlets, manuscripts, sound and video recordings, as well as electronic databases and journals. The mission of the University of Arkansas Libraries is to provide access to information that will support and foster creativity, study, teaching, and research.
About Special Collections: The Special Collections Department at the University of Arkansas Libraries was created in 1967 to encourage research and writing in the history and culture of Arkansas and the surrounding region. The mission of the department is to acquire, preserve, and provide access to historical manuscripts, archives, maps, photographs, and published materials to support scholarly investigation of the state, its customs and people, and its cultural, physical, and political climate. Special Collections include manuscripts and archives, the Arkansas Collection, rare books and special libraries, photographs, broadsides, and maps. The facilities of Special Collections are open to the public. University of Arkansas faculty and students as well as scholars, journalists, and other investigators from throughout the United States and other countries have conducted research in the collections. The results of their work have appeared in theses and dissertations, newspaper articles, scholarly and popular journals and books, exhibits, and television and film productions.
About the University of Arkansas: The University of Arkansas provides an internationally competitive education for undergraduate and graduate students in a wide spectrum of disciplines; contributes new knowledge, economic development, basic and applied research and creative activity; and provides service to academic and professional disciplines and to society in general, all aimed at fulfilling its public land-grant mission to serve Arkansas and beyond as a partner, resource and catalyst. The Carnegie Foundation classifies the University of Arkansas among only 2 percent of universities in America that have the highest level of research. Founded in 1871, the University of Arkansas comprises 10 colleges and schools and offers more than 200 academic programs. The university maintains a low student-to-faculty ratio of 19:1 that promotes personal attention and mentoring opportunities. U.S. News & World Report ranks the University of Arkansas 63 among the 623 American public research universities, and the university’s goal is be top 50 by the celebration of its 150th anniversary in 2021.
Contacts
Tim Nutt, Head, Special Collections
University of Arkansas Libraries
479-575-8443,
timn@uark.edu
Kalli Vimr, public relations coordinator
University Libraries
479-575-7311,
vimr@uark.edu