Item# YT8090
Out of Stock - $39.00 $32.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Martin House Casement Votive is executed in copper and enamel metalwork with a glass insert. The design is adapted from a detail in the Darwin Martin House (Buffalo NY 1903-1905). The Martin House complex has more art glass in more patterns than any other house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright with nearly four hundred examples of Wright-designed art glass. The Frank Lloyd Wright Martin House Casement Votive includes a glass votive holder and flameless tea light. Enjoy the understated mood lighting of a tea light without the risk of fire. The tea light candle has an LED light source to replicate the effect of a yellow flicker flame. Ht: 3.3” (8.5cm). Diameter: 2.4” (5.6cm).
$1,250.00
The original conception of the Taliesin 3 Table Lamp was in 1933, when Frank Lloyd Wright converted the existing gymnasium of his Hillside Home School, located in Spring Green, Wisconsin, into a theater. He designed lighting pendants composed of rectangular light boxes and plywood shields to be suspended from the tall ceiling. These fixtures proved to be a lighting innovation, providing...
$1,250.00
The original conception of the Taliesin 3 Table Lamp was in 1933, when Frank Lloyd Wright converted the existing gymnasium of his Hillside Home School, located in Spring Green, Wisconsin, into a theater. He designed lighting pendants composed of rectangular light boxes and plywood shields to be suspended from the tall ceiling. These fixtures proved to be a lighting innovation, providing...
$2,500.00
The original conception of the Taliesin 2 Floor Lamp was in 1933, when Frank Lloyd Wright converted the existing gymnasium of his Hillside Home School, located in Spring Green, Wisconsin, into a theater. He designed lighting pendants composed of rectangular light boxes and plywood shields to be suspended from the tall ceiling. These fixtures proved to be a lighting innovation,...
$2,500.00
The original conception of the Taliesin 2 Floor Lamp was in 1933, when Frank Lloyd Wright converted the existing gymnasium of his Hillside Home School, located in Spring Green Wisconsin, into a theater. He designed lighting pendants composed of rectangular light boxes and plywood shields to be suspended from the tall ceiling. These fixtures proved to be a lighting innovation,...