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Frank Lloyd Wright commissions

FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT CLIENT NAMES

Frank Lloyd Wright had 685 known clients.  A given client may have commissioned one or several projects from the architect. This search approach sorts Wright projects alphabetically by the last name of the client, and provides links to project information and all related project drawings detailed in the database. Wright also produced a great deal of work for his own purposes, essentially as his own client. References to the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio in Oak Park, Illinois, Taliesin estate at Spring Green, Wisconsin, and Taliesin West in Scottsdale, Arizona, as well as other more temporary residences and studios (e.g., Chicago, New York, Italy, Tokyo, Japan) will be found indexed under his own name.

Frank Lloyd Wright Project Drawing Detail

Edgar J. Kaufmann Charitable Trust

Apartments for the Edgar J. Kaufman Charitable Trust, "Point View Residences", scheme 2, project [Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania] (1953)

Drawing: Scheme 2B site and typical floor plan. See (a) under Comments

Frank Lloyd Wright Archives Drawing Inventory Number: 5310.002

Note: Drawing number assignments shown without question marks are compliant with the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives drawing inventory as of 2011. Drawing number assignments with question marks may represent attempts by John Geiger to order chronologically Wright project drawings which appeared in publications or are held in other collections within the master sequence of the Wright Archives inventory.

Drawing held by: Frank Lloyd Wright Archives.

Drawing Type: Preliminary/Conceptual.

Scale: Not given.
Media: Linen with black ink; colored pencil; brown ink.

Drawing measurements: 33 x 35"
Drawing signed by Frank Lloyd Wright: No.
Date Range
Date created: circa 1953.
Revision Dates: Not recorded.

Note: A variety of dates are provided for some drawings. These can include fuzzy or circa dating information, and a series of up to 5 dates of revision to the drawing. Sometimes a source of attribution for the dates is indicated, most often given as the last name of an author to indicate a publication.

Bibliographic Citations

Appears as a color illustration [page 173] in Cleary, Richard, Merchant Prince and Master Builder: Edgar J. Kaufmann and Frank Lloyd Wright (Seattle, Washington: Universitry of Washington Press, 1999).