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Presentation
Design Intent and Conflicts of the Ownership: Can a New Vision Rescue Taliesin East?
Landscape Architecture Conference Proceedings and Papers
  • Benjamin A Shirtcliff, Iowa State University
Document Type
Abstract
Conference
CELA 2007 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
8-15-2007
Conference Title
CELA 2007 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture, Negotiating Landscapes
Conference Date
August 15-18, 2007
Geolocation
(40.7933949, -77.8600012)
Abstract
THE PROGRESSION OF Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin East from an evolving experiment to a decaying relic provides an example of a discursive space and insight into the concept of ownership. A recently-submitted master plan for Taliesin’s buildings and landscape intends to preserve the architect’s home in the remote bluffs above the Wisconsin River near Spring Green, WI. Its current state refl ects how tensions which underlie the challenge of interpreting design intent can threaten the only thing capable of representing the architect’s work. The presentation will explore this discursive relationship between a cultural landmark and an occupied, living landscape through historic notes, drawings, and photographs. The goal is to question how to interpret the role of design intent in the cultural representation of Taliesin.
Comments

CELA 2007 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture, Negotiating Landscapes, August 15-18, 2007; 141-142. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Pennsylvania State University
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Benjamin A Shirtcliff. "Design Intent and Conflicts of the Ownership: Can a New Vision Rescue Taliesin East?" State College, PA(2007) p. 141 - 142
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/benjamin_shirtcliff/4/