Item# WUDMC006
$62.00 $52.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Colored Kaufmann Mural Design Doormat recreates the mural in an office Wright designed for department store owner Edgar J. Kaufmann. Frank Lloyd Wright's work with Kaufmann is probably best known for resulting in the completion of the 1934 Kaufmann weekend home, Fallingwater. The mural above Kaufmann's desk was described by Wright as a “marquetry plywood wall”, it is a fine example of Wright’s geometric abstractions of nature. This doormat is constructed in coir fiber pressed into a rubber base. The proportions of this mat are 30 inches by 18 inches.
PLEASE NOTE: This item is only available with the "GROUND" shipment selection within the Contiguous U.S. Gift wrap NOT available for this item.
$27.95 $32.00
The design of the Frank Lloyd Wright April Showers Ceramic Bowls is adapted from his "April Showers" cover design submitted to Liberty Magazine. However it was considered too avant-garde and rejected. In this design, Wright's masterful use of the tools of his trade: a t-square, triangle, compass, colored pencils, created an enduring design that captures the essence of spring. These...
$27.95 $32.00
The intricate Frank Lloyd Wright Imperial Peacock Ceramic Bowl design is adapted from a peacock motif rug in the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo (1913-1922, demolished 1968), which depicts a geometric interpretation of the peacock, a motif that was repeated as a mural in "Peacock Alley", the hotel's lavish main lobby. These Frank Lloyd Wright bowls are officially licensed by the...
$31.95 $36.00
An elegant set of glassware, the design of the Frank Lloyd Wright Oak Park Skylight Green Double Old Fashioned (Set of 2) are perfect for both everyday use and entertaining. The design for this double old fashioned is adapted from one of the matched pair of art glass skylights in the entrance to Frank Lloyd Wright's studio, attached to his...
$31.95 $36.00
An elegant set of glassware, the design of the Frank Lloyd Wright Dana-Thomas Orange Butterfly Double Old Fashioned (Set of 2) are perfect for both everyday use and entertaining. The inspiration for this double old fashioned design comes from an art glass entry window in the Susan Lawrence Dana House in Springfield, Illinois (1902). Wright used geometric abstractions of flowers, plants,...