Posts tagged marcos

Frank Lloyd Wright San Marcos Arizona 1927/28 cancelled project glass slide

Frank Lloyd Wright San Marcos Arizona 1927/28 cancelled project glass slide

Frank Lloyd Wright San Marcos Arizona 1927/28 cancelled project glass slide

Frank Lloyd Wright San Marcos Arizona 1927/28 cancelled project glass slide

Frank Lloyd Wright San Marcos Arizona 1927/28 cancelled project glass slide

This one is interesting as this project was cancelled because of the Great Depression.

Replogle San Marcos Frank Lloyd Wright Desktop Globe 12 Inch

Replogle San Marcos Frank Lloyd Wright Desktop Globe 12 Inch

This desktop globe’s legs are angled at 60 degree and support a hexagonal top. The beige colored antique oceans match the beautiful brown hue of the walnut-finish stand. The collaboration between Replogle and the Frank Lloyd Wright foundation is an incredible fruitful one, as evidenced by this curious, enchanting globe.

Frank Lloyd Wright inspired San Marcos 12 Inch Desktop World Globe By Replogle G

Frank Lloyd Wright inspired San Marcos 12 Inch Desktop World Globe By Replogle G

Frank Lloyd Wright inspired San Marcos 12 Inch Desktop World Globe By Replogle G. Walnut finished wood base with die-cast semi-meridian. 12 Inch Diameter, Hand papered Raised Relief Craft fiber Ball. 22″W X 18″D X 22H; Product Weight:?? In 1928, Frank Lloyd Wright began creating a major remodeling project of the existing resort, the San Marcos in the Desert Hotel on the outskirts of Phoenix. The project was never completed due to the 1929 stock market crash, but the building design and the interior renderings contain a variety of interesting furniture and decorative features. This adapted globe stand showcases the 60 degree angled legs and the hexagonal top of a small accent table designed for the totally new special Dining Pavilion bordered by the garden terraces of the San Marcos in the Desert Hotel, Chandler, Arizona. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright inspired San Marcos 12 Inch Desktop World Globe By Replogle G” is in sale since Wednesday, October 12, 2016. This item is in the category “Home & Garden\Home Décor\Globes”. The seller is “geomart_maps” and is located in Indianapolis, Indiana. This item can be shipped to United States.
  • Brand: Replogle
  • Color: Beige
  • Features: Raised Relief
  • Material: Wood
  • MPN: 31819
  • Style: Traditional
  • Type: Tabletop Globe
  • UPC: Does not apply

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #2 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #2 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #2 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #2 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original block fragment from prototype of never-built Frank Lloyd Wright design, San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo Desert Camp, 1929. Includes notarized Certificate of Authenticity. From the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation website. Frank Lloyd Wright began scouting out Arizona in 1928, while consulting on architect Albert Chase McArthurs design for the Arizona Biltmore Hotel. Although not the architect of record, Wright contributed to the project with some attention-catching work and began to explore the Valley of the Sun. During this time, Wright met a patron, Dr. Chandler was ambitious and looking to build a luxury resort, San Marcos-in-the-Desert, which was described as the perfect desert-resort for jaded New Yorker millionaires (Wright, Living in the Desert, 1949). In order to work on this, Wright and his entourage established a camp in 1929, named Ocatillo, in an area to the east of Phoenix named Chandler after Dr. The Ocatillo camp turned out to be a learning and testing ground for many of Wrights ideas about building in the desert. The plan followed the contours of the land. The arrangement of the buildings made an enclosed outdoor space, an asymmetrical courtyard or plaza. There was an asymmetry, and irregularity, guided by the dotted line of the deserts profiles and textures. At the time, modernist architects predominantly were using even, straight, regular lines and the resulting volumes; and in contrast, Wright used organic lines and volumes that he likened to the desert environmentone reason he stood out among the leading architects. At Ocatillo, block prototypes were made for vertically fluted masonry meant for San Marcos-in-the-Desert. Prior to this, Wright had used textile blocks in a few of his California projects, but these were reconceived and reconsidered by studying the structural ribs of saguaros, with an intention of creating appropriate Arizona architecture. This lesson from the saguaro is in the cactuss interior structure. Wright wrote that the saguaro is the perfect example of reinforced building construction. Its interior vertical rods hold it rigidly upright maintaining its great fluted columnar mass for six centuries or more. 309-310 This resort was about ready to go into construction, but due to the 1929 stock market crash the project was halted. The abandoned Ocatillo eventually disappeared as materials were taken for other uses. The item “Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #2 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo” is in sale since Tuesday, April 21, 2020. This item is in the category “Antiques\Architectural & Garden\Other Architectural Antiques”. The seller is “rbmurals-9″ and is located in Jemez Springs, New Mexico. This item can be shipped to United States.
  • Material: plaster
  • Original/Reproduction: Vintage Original
  • Decade: 1920s
  • Color: White
  • Features: Reclaimed

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #1 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #1 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #1 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #1 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo

Original block fragment from prototype of never-built Frank Lloyd Wright design, San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo Desert Camp, 1929. Includes notarized Certificate of Authenticity. From the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation website. Frank Lloyd Wright began scouting out Arizona in 1928, while consulting on architect Albert Chase McArthurs design for the Arizona Biltmore Hotel. Although not the architect of record, Wright contributed to the project with some attention-catching work and began to explore the Valley of the Sun. During this time, Wright met a patron, Dr. Chandler was ambitious and looking to build a luxury resort, San Marcos-in-the-Desert, which was described as the perfect desert-resort for jaded New Yorker millionaires (Wright, Living in the Desert, 1949). In order to work on this, Wright and his entourage established a camp in 1929, named Ocatillo, in an area to the east of Phoenix named Chandler after Dr. The Ocatillo camp turned out to be a learning and testing ground for many of Wrights ideas about building in the desert. The plan followed the contours of the land. The arrangement of the buildings made an enclosed outdoor space, an asymmetrical courtyard or plaza. There was an asymmetry, and irregularity, guided by the dotted line of the deserts profiles and textures. At the time, modernist architects predominantly were using even, straight, regular lines and the resulting volumes; and in contrast, Wright used organic lines and volumes that he likened to the desert environmentone reason he stood out among the leading architects. At Ocatillo, block prototypes were made for vertically fluted masonry meant for San Marcos-in-the-Desert. Prior to this, Wright had used textile blocks in a few of his California projects, but these were reconceived and reconsidered by studying the structural ribs of saguaros, with an intention of creating appropriate Arizona architecture. This lesson from the saguaro is in the cactuss interior structure. Wright wrote that the saguaro is the perfect example of reinforced building construction. Its interior vertical rods hold it rigidly upright maintaining its great fluted columnar mass for six centuries or more. 309-310 This resort was about ready to go into construction, but due to the 1929 stock market crash the project was halted. The abandoned Ocatillo eventually disappeared as materials were taken for other uses. The item “Original Frank Lloyd Wright block fragment #1 San Marcos in the Desert, Ocatillo” is in sale since Tuesday, April 21, 2020. This item is in the category “Antiques\Architectural & Garden\Other Architectural Antiques”. The seller is “rbmurals-9″ and is located in Jemez Springs, New Mexico. This item can be shipped to United States.
  • Material: plaster
  • Original/Reproduction: Vintage Original
  • Decade: 1920s
  • Features: Reclaimed
  • Color: White