Item# WB4834
$80.00 $52.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Luxfer Prism Wall Clock is based on his designed and patented series of forty-five prisms in clear glass tiles for the Luxfer Prism Company. Wright designed The Luxfer Prisms Office Building in Buffalo, New York, 1896-97, with the front and rear walls of the building made entirely of Luxfer Prism tiles. This clock incorporates two of the Luxfer Prism designs, including the flower design that was the only one that was ever actually produced. This clock includes a metal case in a bronze finish, raised hour markers on the dial, a protective convex glass lens and a quiet sweep second hand. Diameter: 14” Depth: 1.75”. From the Frank Lloyd Wright Collection by Bulova.
$81.25 $112.00
The Frank Lloyd Wright Robie Stained Glass Suncatcher is adapted from one of the distinctive art glass doors in the Frederick C. Robie House, located in Chicago, Illinois, designed in 1908 and completed in 1910. Its dramatic horizontal appearance is enhanced by banks of art glass windows and doors. The handsome geometric designs, twenty-nine of which are uniquely different, although...
$78.95 $86.00
The Louis Sullivan Skylight Tapestry Table Runner is inspired by a window designed by Louis Henry Sullivan. The window is from a branch of the Farmers Merchant & Union Bank, 1919. For a young Frank Lloyd Wright, his years working under Louis Sullivan, February of 1888 to June of 1893, undoubtedly shaped his design philosophy. Wright, who rarely acknowledged any direct influences called Sullivan his “Lieber...
$54.95 $75.00
Frank Lloyd Wright used Teco pottery as decorative accents in many of the houses he designed. Teco (an abbreviation of TErra COtta) art pottery was originally produced from 1899-1920’s by the American Terra Cotta and Ceramics Company in Terra Cotta, Illinois. With groundbreaking shapes both architectural and organic, these high-quality reproductions maintain the integrity of the originals. Water tight with...
$97.95 $112.00
The design for this Frank Lloyd Wright Oak Park Tapestry Throw was adapted from Wright's famous skylight from his Oak Park Studio (Oak Park, Illinois, 1898). Developed in association with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, the throw measures 48" x 68". 100% cotton. Machine washable and dryable. Made in the USA.