६ जून, २००९
I was a caryatid for Frank Lloyd Wright.
In case you were wondering where I was all day, I was serving as a docent on the 2009 Wright and Like Tour in the morning, at the Jacobs II house....
... and touring various houses in Madison in the afternoon. The photo at the top of the post was taken at the John C. Pew House.
Tags:
architecture,
caryatid,
Frank Lloyd Wright,
Madison,
photography
याची सदस्यत्व घ्या:
टिप्पणी पोस्ट करा (Atom)
७४ टिप्पण्या:
Althouse, you are a pillar of the community.
Such a goddess really.
Is that a docent skirt?
Hoo boy. Big trouble's a brewin'
*Pops popcorn, waits for Althouse to find out.....*
That's probably the most subversive thing you can do to a Frank Lloyd Wright building.
That's probably the most subversive thing you can do to a Frank Lloyd Wright building.
I think finding and stopping the leaks may be worse, but that is a never-ending effort.
You look fabulous.
I'm pretty sure caryatids are traditionally dressed in more gossamer-y stuff, but nice, anyway.
(and with a high in the 50s today, I'm guessing gossamer would be a bit nippy)
(or nipply, even)
Underneath that skirt, Maria Callas is warming up for act II of Norma.
Theo: Should we be listening to some Wagner this evening?
Prairie shmary. All that horizontality (is that a word?) depresses me.
Theo - Good choice. The evening need some funk.
Plus, I thing a toying belly scratch would work.
And, as you may have discerned from the typos in the comment above, the first bottle of merlot has been readied for the recycling bin.
That is a funny photograph.
And better a docent skirt than an indocent one.
Look at the house in the first photo again. Althouse, who is what, five feet tall, is standing at what appears to be the entry to the carport. Not many cars, then or now, could fit under that roof height.
And look at the water stains on the cedar siding above the cantilever. No drainage issues there. Sheesh, and the uncaulked bevel edge corners.
Great structure.
The house is nice too.
I'm 5'5 1/2".
Ricpic, horizontality! Exactly! It makes me exceedingly uncomfortable!
Frank Lloyd Wright was 5'-8 1/2" tall. That was the human scale he used. Himself.
That's the way he rolled.
I'm 5'5 1/2".
That means its not up to code.
That house is a teardown candidate ;)
You are a nut bearing a smile that Frank Lloyd Wright would have fallen for in his time.
We're all the same height laying down.
Michael H. :Maybe that garage was for an Indian Motorcycle owner.
"Frank Lloyd Wright was 5'-8 1/2" tall"
Coincidentally, that is exactly the height of the average adult Canadian male.
Genius doesn't need no stinkin' code.
Look if you want a barn, a low barn at that, Wright is your man.
FLW disliked lesser people, not little people. He didn't pay his bills either.
Are docents required to wear frumpy skirts?
I'm pulling your theo ;)
Wright was good, but I just don't think he was a "genius".
We had a curtain like that skirt hanging behind the proscenium of our campuses opera house. Was the same color, too!
Love the skirt you diva.
Theo--great video at the link. I had no idea the Alpenhorn had quite that much range (the fact that she's doing all that with embouchure alone makes it all the more impressive). I was in Switzerland for the Montreux festival in '99 and saw one of those horns on the wall--quite a bit of the wall, mind you--in a store I visited. If there'd been a way to get that thing on the plane, I would've bought it in a heartbeat.
And while on the subject of jazzy sounds on unlikely instruments, check out this video of a guy playing John Coltrane's "Blue Train" solo on the recorder. And a left-handed recorder at that!
Speaking of 'genius', iTunes is just downloading a new version. Hopefully this new genius wont suck as much.
Trackback: Sunday Morning Linkage 2
Althouse should have her wedding here.
An online wedding!
Hey, how about a bloggingheads segment with Bob Wright officiating?
An online wedding!
I meant at this building. It may be hard to maintain, but it would be neat to tie the knot in. Plus, she could redo the photo in her wedding dress!
Althouse - Sorry about the height misunderestimation.
A reason to stop at Burger King next trip.
via Tim Blair
So long, Frank Lloyd Wright.
That hammerin' sound you hear is the owner fixing a leaky roof . . . or banging his head against the wall for buying the house in the first place.
Love,
I. M. Pei
A caryatid's headache. The worst kind.
Meade said...
Such a goddess really.
Awwwwww! That was sweet!
And accurate, really.
Godesses were favorite caryatids of the Romans and Greeks.
Althouse as Athena, not just a docent (love the word and the title - sort of a person in a temporary position of intellectual trust, enriching other's knowledge and appreciation of what the see...)
In the interest of accuracy, I do wish to point out a more bona fide caryatid would be entirely begowned, perhaps with one or both breasts bare, and wearing a head ornament.
For other posters, my "intellectual" question of the day...which Goddess was topless more in statues and depictions? Diana or Athena?
Good, God. I'm certainly no fashion maven, so if your outfit freaked me out, it has to be a real travesty. Are those antique drapes wrapped around your waist? Looks like something from the Addams Family household. Combined with a blue and white horizontal stripe tee and a... whatever that sandstone colored thing is? Dissonance and cacophony.
But hey, thanks for the laugh.
Hucbald: You forgot to address Ann as "girlfriend".
I learned two new words in that post.
Never mind the historical architecture, how antique is that skirt?
wow. just wow.
You know, I actually like the skirt.
For other posters, my "intellectual" question of the day...which Goddess was topless more in statues and depictions? Diana or Athena?
Lady Justice?
If you like or don't like the skirt, the brand is Surrealist and it was bought in a stylish shop within the last year. I have it in 4 colors and I have jackets and shirts from the same designer.
It's a solid color. The fabric is ruched. If you don't know what "ruched" means, you need to watch "Project Runway" more or stop mouthing off as if you know what is fashionable.
You can see me in the black version of the skirt here and here.
If you're looking for a good read, check out T.C. Boyle's (Drop City, Tortilla Curtain) new one: "The Women." It's Boyle's vibrant imagining of Frank Lloyd Wright's complex (and stormy) relationship with the four women in his life.
I'm a third of the way through. Boyle really captures the era: mid-20s and mid-30s.
Good descriptions of Taliesin.
Also, according to Boyle, Wright was more like 5'6" or so than his "advertised" 5'8"+. So Ann fits right in.
Do caryatids get carotid aneurysms holding all that weight above their heads?
I like that skirt and, more generally, I think it's cool that Althouse wears (or at least appears to wear) skirts so often.
IIRC, Althouse shops locally, but here is a site featuring Surrealist skirts, among others that I like, too.
[All that said, I'm trying to remember the last time I wore a skirt. I think maybe at a wedding last August? And before that, maybe January 2007?
When did I stop wearing skirts? I used to wear them all the time, especially in summer.
Yet another of life's small, inexplicable mysteries.]
Althouse Shrugged?
Or with a Wright house perhaps channelling Dominique Francon?
@reader Long skirts are super-comfortable -- nothing grabbing at you between the legs (as with pants) and nothing to pull at and arrange (as with short skirts). It can be very cool in the summer, and who knows whether you have panties on?
@Roger Thanks. I'd heard of the book and, after reading your comment, I found and downloaded it from Audible.com for our trip back to Ohio today. Took just a few seconds to do.
Sorry, Ann.
Given your propensity for criticizing men's fashion choices - such as shorts - I think that that Hucbald's comments were right on the mark.
If you don't want people to criticize your taste (?!) in fashion, don't post pictures of youself. Glass houses, etc.
"Sheesh! Were was Hucbald last night when I was expecting 97 comments along those lines to make an Althouse "Go Fug Yourself" thread."
I do believe I made the funniest caustic criticism of the skirt in this very thread, which was ignored. Hucbald's criticism was pedestrian.
"@reader Long skirts are super-comfortable -- nothing grabbing at you between the legs..."
Is Meade back in Ohio?
"and nothing to pull at and arrange."
You definitely wouldn't enjoy being a man...
"It can be very cool in the summer, and who knows whether you have panties on?"
Presumably and hopefully you know.
Blogger Fred4Pres wrote, Althouse Shrugged?
Fred wins the thread. :)
Palladian:
Yours was indeed more erudite and pithy - however Hucbold's was to the point and didn't require looking it up in Wikdipedia.
However I do apologize for the oversight...
My husband and I went to the Wright Plus tour in Oak Park, IL. Loved it, especially his home and studio and the Robie House.
Say... I just noticed your subtitle. I'd drop the ALTHOUSE - looks redundant. (What would Mr Buckett say if he were let go?) Until then, consider Taliesin West, Wright's wintertime retreat (now much encroached/surroonded) and pupilatin' devotee parsonage. (Were Rand and he "involved.") Nice place. Go on a weekday. Hit the clubs on the weekend. Be careful; they're out in force. Then you'd need Rumpole.
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