Wright in the Abstract

Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2022)

I had to edit 34,575 Frank Lloyd Wright building images (or 185.62 GB) down to 30 photos for an exhibit.

IMG_2493.jpeg

IMG_2494.jpeg

Here’s the backstory: Lake Forest (Illinois) College, my alma mater, honored me with two concurrent exhibits this month for my 50th anniversary Homecoming. Rebecca Goldberg, Lecturer in Art and Director of the Gallery in the Romanesque Durand Art Institute building, initially asked me just to include a handful of my Frank Lloyd Wright work in an exhibit of my career in photojournalism. I found it hard to edit the Wright work down to just four or so photos. Fortunately there was enough space in two galleries to mount two separate exhibits, each with 30 prints. I decided to pick mostly abstract interpretations of Wright’s work than show perhaps predictable building photos. My selection is below, in alphabetical order of the commissions:

LR Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church (1956) .jpgAnnunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, 1956

LR Florida Southern College (1938)  .jpgFlorida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938

LR Florida Southern College (1938) .jpgFlorida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938

LR Florida Southern College (1938).jpgFlorida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938

LR Guggenheim Museum (1943).jpgGuggenheim Museum, New York City, 1943

LR Hillside Drafting Studio (ca. 1933).jpgHillside Drafting Room, Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1933

LR Hollyhock House (1919).jpgHollyhock House, Los Angeles, 1919

LR Imperial Hotel (1915).jpgImperial Hotel entry way, Tokyo, 1915, as rebuilt at Meiji Mura near Nagoya, Japan

LR Lindholm Service Station (1956).jpgLindholm Service Station, Cloquet, Minnesota, 1956

LR Marin County Civic Center (1957) .jpgMarin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957

LR Marin County Civic Center (1957).jpgMarin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957

LR Meyer May House  (1908) .jpgMeyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908

LR Meyer May House (1908) .jpgMeyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908

LR Meyer May House (1908).jpgMeyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908

LR Price Tower (1956)   .jpgPrice Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952

LR Price Tower (1956) .jpgPrice Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952

LR Price Tower (1956).jpgPrice Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952

LR Romeo and Julie Windmill (1898).jpgRomeo and Juliet Windmill, Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1898

LR SC Johnson Administration Building (1936).jpgSC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936

LR SC Johnson Addition (1943-44).jpgSC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936

LR SC Johnson Administration Building (1936) .jpg

SC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936

LR SC Johnson Research Tower (1943-44) .jpgSC Johnson Research Tower, Racine, Wisconsin, 1943/44

LR Taliesin (1911, 1925)    .jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Taliesin (1911, 1925)   .jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Taliesin (1911, 1925).jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Taliesin Visitors (1911, 1925).jpgTaliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925

LR Thomas P. Hardy House (1904-05).jpgThomas P. Hardy House, Racine, Wisconsin, 1904/05

LR Wingspread (1937) .jpgWingspread, Wind Point, Wisconsin, 1937

LR Wingspread (1937).jpgWingspread, Wind Point, Wisconsin, 1937

Now, as for those 34,575 images…if I had time to go through them, a good chunk could be deleted. But who has time to do that?

Hours for the gallery…the show runs through October 30:

https://www.lakeforest.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/art-and-art-history/art-galleries

Keep scrolling down for previous posts on the website…

Writing Wright With Light-Photo Adventures at two Wright sites in Milwaukee

© Mark Hertzberg

Something wasn’t right today. I was not committed to taking pictures as I accompanied my 11th Road Scholar Frank Lloyd Wright trip, my second in a month, to sites in Milwaukee today.* As I have written in past blogs, I try to see and photograph something new every time I visit a familiar Wright site, but I did not feel photographically inspired this trip. When I got to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block, our first stop, I thought I had seen all the pictures there were to take, on the trip in May:

https://wrightinracine.wordpress.com/2022/05/19/wright-tourism-is-back-bits-of-burnham/

So, I left my workhorse cameras on the bus and carried just my iPhone 11 Pro. Then I saw something that struck me. I gingerly took out my phone and snapped a picture:

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 001.jpg

I put the phone back in my pocket, thinking it would be a “one and done” day. I took two photos of Road Scholars eager to enter the American System-Built B-1 Richards House, and again figured, that would be it for the day:

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 004.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 005.jpg

Ah, but there was more to come, above me, and inside the house:

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 020.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 019.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 011.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 017.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 016.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 014.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 013.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 009.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 010.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 008.jpg

Burnham Abstracts 6.16.22 007.jpg

Done for the day? Maybe, but I decided to bring the “real” cameras with me when we got to the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa. I was immediately struck by the cloudless and rich blue sky. It seemed in synch with the blue color scheme of much of the church building. First, was the obligatory “record” snapshot before pushing my eye:

AGOC 6.16.22 003.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 009.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 006.jpg

The “crown of thorns” below the domed roof presented myriad photos:

AGOC 6.16.22 010.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 011.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 012.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 016.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 017.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 018.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 021.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 020.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 019.jpg

Then I came to the entry way and its cantilevered canopy:

AGOC 6.16.22 022.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 024.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 025.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 041.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 040.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 032.jpg

There are thousands of two inch by two inch ceramic tiles above the roof of the canopy. Our docent, my friend Cathy Spyres, explained that these are the same tiles that were on the original roof of the church. The original tiles were not replaced after they started popping off the roof.

AGOC 6.16.22 027.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 034.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 038.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 033.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 030.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 028.jpg

Then, onto a quest to see something new inside the church:

AGOC 6.16.22 042.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 043.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 045.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 044.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 051.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 048.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 047.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 049.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 054.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 055.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 056.jpg

AGOC 6.16.22 060.jpg

Spyres told the guests that blue (as well as gold) is one of the dominant colors inside and outside the church because it is part of the Byzantine heritage. So was the sky, I thought, as I heard her explanation.

I was in touch a few months ago with the director of a Wright site to take photos for a forthcoming Wright book by a university professor. The director was critical of one of my earlier photos from the site because it had an “on the spot look.” I asked for clarification: “On the spot means it looks like a hand-held shot. It isn’t carefully studied. It has a casual look.” I make no apologies for my style of working: “Casually,” and “hand-held.”

Photography literally means “writing with light.” Today the light was perfect for me to write Wright.

*The guests’ week-long itinerary begins in Chicago and Oak Park, continues to Racine, where I join them, then on to Milwaukee, Madison, and Spring Green. They see 12 Wright sites in Wisconsin during this deep immersion into the World of Wright:

https://www.roadscholar.org/find-an-adventure/22976/architectural-masterworks-of-frank-lloyd-wright

Wright Tourism is Back: Bits of Burnham

© Mark Hertzberg (2022)

LR Burnham 2022 010.jpgSybil Knop talks to Road Scholar guests touring the Burnham Block May 19

The pandemic is far from over, but Wright tourism is ramping up again. I have helped lead the Wisconsin portion of Road Scholar’s week-long tour that starts in Chicago and ends in Spring Green since 2017 (a link to the itinerary is below). This week is our first of three tours for this year since 2019.. We have 16 guests from 10 states on this tour. Our first stop was the Burnham Block in Milwaukee which has six American System-Built homes, most owned by Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block, Inc.

LR Burnham 2022 001.jpg

I always challenge myself to see if I can find fresh photographs at Wright sites, no matter how often I have visited them. Here is what I saw on the Burnham Block after two years away from my Wright photo quests. I have two establishing shots showing signs of spring:

LR Burnham 2022 006.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 007.jpg

I concentrated more on patterns or design elements that I saw, mostly at the duplexes (dupli?) at 2032 – 2034 W. Burnham Street, left, and 2028 – 2030 next door.

LR Burnham 2022 012.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 015.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 024.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 029.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 020.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 021.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 022.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 027.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 023.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 018.jpgThis is not a version of the Frank Lloyd Wright signature tile…it is one of the faded red squares that have been used as social distancing markers on Burnham Street.

LR Burnham 2022 017.jpgI thought Frank Lloyd Wright hated basements.” They were not his favorite spaces, but he did not eschew them entirely. This is one of the vents from the basement at 2032 – 2034.

I told our guests that one of the great benefits of touring 2032 – 2034 is that while they generally see fully restored or rehabilitated Wright structures, this was an opportunity to see one in raw shape, as money from a Save America’s Treasures grants is used to bring it to house museum status like the Model B-1 down the block at 2714 W. Burnham St.

LR IMG_0346.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 044.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 043.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 061.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 062.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 063.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 064.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 065.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 066.jpgThis period stove is in a closet until the restoration is done.

LR Burnham 2022 048.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 049.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 053.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 057.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 059.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 058.jpg

We then toured the Model B-1, one of the two single-family homes on the block. It was the first Burnham property acquired by what became the Burnham Block organization, in 2004. It has been fully restored with a Save America’s Treasures grant. It is a tribute to Mike Lilek and the organizations that have been the stewards of Burnham received not one, but two SAT grants.

LR Burnham 2022 067.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 068.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 069.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 079.jpg

LR DSC_3537.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 081.jpg

There are still two duplexes that will need restoration, including the world’s only Frank Lloyd Wright building clad in aluminum siding:

LR Burnham 2022 009.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 041.jpg

LR Burnham 2022 039.jpg

I close this blog entry with a nod to my friend Cathy Spyres, docent extraordinaire at Wright’s Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church – her church – in Wauwatosa. The church is our second Wright stop on our Milwaukee itinerary:

LR IMG_0403.jpg

Tomorrow’s itinerary is another full day: We are overnighting in Madison tonight, after also seeing the Milwaukee Art Museum (Saarinen / Calatrava) and Monona Terrace. Tomorrow we start at Jacobs 1 and then go to the Unitarian Meeting House, Wyoming Valley School and have lunch at Riverview Terrace before our in-depth tours of Taliesin and Hillside. I can attest from our own trips with Road Scholar that you see so much and learn so much (education is a major component of their programming) that you need a vacation after your RS vacation! Wright tourism is, indeed back in full swing!

Links:

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block:

http://wrightinmilwaukee.com

This Road Scholar Trip Itinerary (we also have a full tour of the Hardy House in Racine and an exterior guided tour of Jacobs 1, although they are not listed in the advance itinerary):

https://www.roadscholar.org/find-an-adventure/22976/architectural-masterworks-of-frank-lloyd-wright

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rainy Day Post #3 – A Wright Potpourri

Photos (c) Mark Hertzberg (2020)

I have promised you one more “rainy day post,” cleaning up pictures that have been waiting on my desktop for the right context to post them in. This is a smattering of photos of Frank Lloyd Wright sites I have visited in one context or another since July 2018. While I shoot literal photos of Wright buildings (“head shots” we called them in the newsroom), I also look for photos of details of Wright’s designs. I am generally not sharing interior photos of private homes. I try to avoid looking at other photographers’ interpretations of Wright buildings before I visit them so that I see the structures through my own eye and lens, rather than possibly copy another photographer’s vision.

The photos are in chronological order, beginning with a wonderful trip to the Detroit area that July two years ago. We were with our good friends Bob and Jeanne Maushammer from Virginia. Jeanne’s exposure to Wright began when she was a teenager, hired to babysit at the Thomas P. Hardy House in Racine for Schuyler and Peterkin Seward, stewards of the house between 1957 – 1963. The Maushammers dutifully chronicle their Wright adventures in a well worn copy of William Allin Storrer’s The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright. I will copy and paste Jeanne’s recollections of the Hardy House from my 2006 book about the house at the end of this blog post.

Our first stop was at the Affleck House in Bloomfield Hills, where Dale Gyure graciously gave us a private tour:

Affleck House 009.jpg

Affleck House 018.jpg

Affleck House 026.jpg

Affleck House 029.jpg

Affleck House 032.jpg

We were fortunate to next get a private tour of the Melvin Smith House. The light was not as subtle as the architecture in the early afternoon:

Smith House 014a.jpg

Smith House 020.jpg

Then we were off to the Turkel House, lovingly restored by our good friends Norm Silk and Dale Morgan. Jeanne has wonderful stories of having seen the then-distressed house ca. 2004 right after a questionable tenant had been evicted. We had bid on a dinner at the house, to benefit the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy. Norm went above and beyond shopping for us in a Middle Eastern market, and we had a lovely meal in the garden. The Maushammers, Cindy (Hertzberg), and Norm:

Turkel House Dinner 010.jpgWe planned to stay only a couple of hours and not overstay our welcome, but we were like family enjoying the house in the living room after dinner until past 11 p.m.! The light was harsh when we arrived at 5 p.m., and I wondered how it would change through the evening:

Turkel House 001.jpg

Turkel House 032.jpg

Turkel House 044.jpg

Turkel House 046.jpg

Turkel House 011.jpg

Turkel House 016.jpg

Our next adventure was when Bob and Jeanne treated us to a stay at the Palmer House in Ann Arbor:

Palmer House 031.jpg

Palmer House 034.jpg

Palmer House 042.jpg

Palmer House 037.jpg

Palmer House 082.jpg

Palmer House 068.jpg

I was then on tour in familiar territory in Wisconsin, helping lead tours for Road Scholar, first in Racine at SC Johnson and at Wingspread. I have visited and photographed these wonderful spaces umpteen times, and always look for a fresh way to see them:

SCJ Carport 2018 003.jpg

SCJ Carport 2018 004.jpg

SCJ Research Tower 2018 .jpg

I climbed these stairs at Wingspread countless times before seeing this photo:

Wingspread Stairs 9.23.19.jpg

I was then taken, again, by the fixtures at the Annunication Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa (suburban Milwaukee):

AGOC 2018 002.jpg

AGOC 2018 004.jpg

AGOC 2018 007.jpg

AGOC Interior 9.24.19 002.jpg

AGOC Interior 9.24.19 001.jpg

Annunciation GOC002 9.6.18.jpg

After touring Racine and Milwaukee, we take our Road Scholar guests to Madison and Spring Green. First, a detail of the ceiling of Jacobs 1:

Jacobs 1 9.7.18 009.jpg

Then, a light well in Anthony Puttnam’s interpretation of Monona Terrace:

Monona Terrace.jpg

The trip culminates at Taliesin – of course – after seeing the Unitarian Meeting House in Madison and Wyoming Valley School, with lunch at Riverview Terrace. Our introduction to Taliesin is a pause at the dam:

Taliesen Dam 2.jpg

Taliesin.jpg

Taliesin 9.7.19 002.jpg

I finish with Jeanne’s recollection of babysitting at the Hardy House and a “selfie” there:

(From “Frank Lloyd Wright’s Thomas P. Hardy House,” written and photographed by Mark Hertzberg, Pomegranate: 2006):

Jeanne (Weins) Maushammer, who baby-sat for the Sewards, recalls growing up nearby. “The house was well-known to everyone in the neighborhood.  People would go to the 14th Street public beach there and see the house just a short distance away.  It did not look like a private residence.  Visitors from outside the area – even across town – would see two openings that could easily be mistaken for bath house entrances, and try to go in to change their clothes.

“Sometimes when you were driving around with out-of-town folks, they would ask ‘What is that?’  They did not recognize it as a house, because it was so different from the other homes around it, and because it was next to the beach.  Neighbors knew what it really was.  The Johnson Wax complex was down the street from us, so the Hardy House seemed to be appropriate.  My folks often told me of their witnessing the construction of the Administration Building and of seeing Frank Lloyd Wright.  The Johnson buildings were understood and accepted by visitors, but not the ‘beach house.’

“My friends and I used to go down to the beach all the time.  We could not get close enough to the property to get a good look at it.  We always had to look through the trees.  We could not see how it blended into the hill side.  That added to the mystery of it.  From the street, all that people could see was just that box.

“I knew it was a Frank Lloyd Wright house before I first went inside.  What I did not realize was how he proportioned houses to his small frame.  I remember thinking when inside for the first time:  ‘I am 5’4” but wow, these doorways are low.’  It was dark and raining that particular day, so I did not get to appreciate the house’s real beauty.  After I had been there several times and had a chance to explore it, to stand in that living room and on the balcony, and to take in the view, I realized it was incredible.

“My husband has never seen the inside of the house, except in photos, but in our wildest dreams we would like to buy it and come back to Racine.”

Hardy Selfie 9.23.18.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photographing Wright, redux

(c) Mark Hertzberg (2019)

Note: My photos of Minerva and Charles Montooth are the post below this one.

This is the final installment of my 2019 quest to find new photos as I visit buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright that are familiar to me. I visited them five times accompanying Road Scholar trips this year:

https://www.roadscholar.org/find-an-adventure/22976/architectural-masterworks-of-frank-lloyd-wright

I have posted earlier photos on the website since May. Have a look, and let me know what you think!!! The photos are in the order in which we visited these sites…not all the sites visited are represented on this post.

Wingspread, Wind Point (Racine):

Wingspread.JPG

Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa:

AGOC 002.JPG

AGOC 001.JPG

Jacobs 1, Madison:

Jacobs 1 004.jpg

Jacobs 1 001.JPG

Jacobs 1 002.JPG

Jacobs 1 003.jpg

The Unitarian Meeting House, Madison:

Unitarian 002.JPG

Unitarian 001.JPG

Unitarian 003.JPG

Wyoming Valley School, Spring Green:

Wyoming Valley.jpg

Taliesin 3:

Taliesin 001.JPG

Taliesin 002.JPG

Taliesin 003.JPG

The original drafting studio at Taliesin:

Drafting Studio 001.jpg

Drafting Studio 002.jpg

Drafting Studio 003.jpg

Drafting Studio 004.jpg

Drafting Studio 005.jpg

Midway Barns:

Midway.jpg

Hillside Home and School:

Hillside .JPG

Michael DiPadova continues reconstruction of the Tea Circle:

Tea Circle 5.jpg

Tea Circle 4.jpg

Tea Circle 3.jpg

Tea Circle 1.jpg

Tea Circle 2.jpg

And, finally, my friends, I leave you with two more “selfies,” one at Wingspread and one at Taliesin!

Taliesin Selfie 9.25.19.jpg

Wingspread Selfie.jpg

Exploring Wright with my cameras: 9.17.19

(c) Mark Hertzberg

I have written several posts this year about the stimulating challenge of finding new ways to photograph Frank Lloyd Wright- designed buildings on my umpteenth visit to them. This week I am helping lead my fourth Road Scholar Wright – Wisconsin discovery tour of the year. Today’s photo adventure was in the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin.

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 001.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 002.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 007.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 008.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 009.jpg

The photos above were all taken from the same seat.

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 011.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 012.jpg

LR AGOC Interiors 9.17.19 015.jpg

The next two pictures were quick grab shots at Monona Terrace in Madison. They show the Wisconsin State Capitol framed by jets from the water fountain on the rooftop garden level:

Wisconsin State Capitol Monona Terrace 002.jpg

Wisconsin State Capitol Monona Terrace 001.jpg

Tomorrow we are off to visit Jacobs 1, the Unitarian Meeting House, Wyoming Valley School, Taliesin, and Hillside Home and School. Will I see something new? That’s the challenge! It happened often in past visits with RS groups this spring – and I have posted those photos – but I won’t force a photo. If nothing speaks to me tomorrow, so be it; I can’t shoot something just for the sake of taking a picture.

Photographing Wright

Photos (c) Mark Hertzberg 2017

I have been accompanying a Road Scholar architecture tour in Racine, Milwaukee, Madison, and Spring Green. Below are some photos I’ve shot during the tour, as well as some photos from a shoot at SC Johnson Tuesday:

The ceiling in the entry way of Wyoming Valley School, Spring Green:Wyoming Valley 2 LR.jpg

Classroom window mitre at Wyoming Valley School:Wyoming Valley LR 1.jpg

View of the Wisconsin River from Riverview Terrace Restaurant:

Riverview LR 1.jpg

The Ceiling in the Assembly Room of Hillside Home School, Spring Green:

Hillside LR.jpg

Taliesin, Spring Green:

Taliesin LR.jpgTaliesin 2 LR.jpg

Unitarian Meeting House, Madison

Unitarian 2 LR.jpgUnitarian LR.jpgUnitarian Pano 1 LR.jpgUnitarian Pano 2 LR.jpg

Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa:

Annunication Pano LR.jpg

Wingpsread (H.F. Johnson Jr. Home), Wind Point:

Wingpsread LR 2.jpgWingpsread LR.jpg

SC Johnson Administration Building, Racine:

SCJ LR.jpgSCJ 5 LR.jpgSCJ 3 LR.jpgSCJ 6 LR.jpgSCJ 2 LR.jpgSCJ 4 LR.jpg

And, finally, one that did not work out…I needed a photo to illustrate Wright’s use of light in the Great Workroom…I did not want the typical documentary photo. I borrowed a fisheye lens from Nikon. I have given it a trial run with some people via email, and they have given it a thumbs down. I am inclined to agree with them. But I had to try it. Here is what that miss looks like:Skylights 9.5.17.jpg

Good Friday at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church

Photos and text (c) Mark Hertzberg

       I had the privilege of being invited by Father Angelo Artemas to photograph vespers and evening services yesterday, Good Friday in the Greek Orthodox Church, at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church near Milwaukee.

Image

Image

Image

        I came there as an architectural photographer, but photographed as a photojournalist, to show how the building works for its intended purpose, as an ecclesiastical building. I was allowed to shoot from wherever I wanted to go during the services, and was warmly welcomed by the congregation. The photos that follow show the service and rich traditions of the church, as well as the building. They are in order: first, the afternoon vespers service, and then the candlelit evening service, which included a procession around the outside of the church.

Image

Congregants kissed the icon of Jesus Christ before vespers

Image

Father David Hostetler holds the Gospel aloft during a procession around the sanctuary

Image

Image

Much of the liturgy is conducted by the priests behind the screen in front of the sanctuary. This is because the priests lead the congregation in prayer, rather than praying to them. As shown in a previous posting of interior photos of the church (https://wrightinracine.wordpress.com/2013/04/12/annunciation-greek-orthodox-church-2/)

Eugene Masselink’s icons were replaced by icons that are said to better reflect church doctrine. That is why there are no plans to put Masselink’s icons back in the sanctuary. Masselink’s icons are shown in the previous article.

Image

Father Angelo Artemas takes the icon of Christ down from the cross

Image

The shrouded icon (right) is then carried around the church

Image

Image

Image

Image

ImageAt the end of the service congregants, including children, express their reverence as they kiss the Gospel, the cross, and art work of the crucifixion of Christ which are displayed in a flower-decorated symbolic representation of the empty tomb of Christ. The empty tomb is part of the procession outside the church during the evening service, below:

Image

 

 

 

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

 

Father David Hostetler lights congregants’ candles

Image

Image

Image

 

Image

Image

The procession forms to go outside

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

ImageImage

Image

Father Angelo Artemas gives congregants flowers from the symbolic empty tomb, as they kiss his hand at the end of the evening service.

 

Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church

Text and Photos (c) Mark Hertzberg

I recently had the privilege of being invited by Father Angelo Artemas to photograph the interior of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, a suburb of Milwaukee.

Image

ImageImage

Interestingly, with all the thousands of dollars in camera bodies and lenses I carry, the two thin horizontals were shot with my iPhone 4S using the Panorama camera function.

I have many “record shots” of the sanctuary, but the photos I am posting are photos of details in the church. One of the most important design features in the sanctuary are the three light poles in the stairwells. The three light poles represent the Holy Trinity. The white lights represent the stars, the blue lights the Virgin Mary.

Image

ImageImageImageImage

Image

Image

Cindy, my wife and extra set of eyes, noticed a resemblance between the sculptured ends of the pews and the statue of Nakoma at the SC Johnson Research Tower in Racine. Maria Pandazi, a member of the congregation and past president of Frank Lloyd Wright Wisconsin (www.wrightinwisconsin.org) explained to me that, “The sculptured ends of the pews are intended to represent the Christian symbol of the fish pointed downward (the ball being the tail).”

Image

Natural light is supplemented by light fixtures below the dome:

Image

Wright’s windows were integral parts of his designs. There are art glass windows on either side of the front door. The first photo shows one of the windows and its reflection on the floor of the entry way.

Image

The second photo shows one of the windows viewed through the glass wall added at the entrance to the sanctuary after Wright’s death. He did not design those windows.

Image

Another significant change in the church was the removal of the icons which Eugene Masselink designed for the altar. The original icons are now displayed in the basement of the church:

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

The next photos are exterior photos shot last summer…

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image