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  • Architecture,  Art,  Features,  Interior Design

    Reimagining The Shingled House

    / Comments Off on Reimagining The Shingled House
    04.Shingle72.IKBASagaponack_S7_103
    Shingle House/IKBA Sagaponack

    The New Shingled House by Ike Kligerman Barkley features projects located throughout the fabled seaside resorts of New England – Martha’s Vineyard, Watch Hill, Block Island – and the Hamptons, as well as in California and the Carolinas. The fourteen houses presented here evoke the rich heritage of American architecture and achieve the architects’ stated goal: when their clients enter their new home for the first time, they feel as though they have always lived there.

    06.Shingle126.IBKABlockIsland_S6_070_SW_V1
    Gracious and elegant: An all white, serene and welcoming interior in Block Island by Ike Kligerman Barkley, Architects
    09.Shingle169.IKBA_MV_S17_278
    Mid century modern meets the 21st Century: The New Shingled House: Ike Kligerman Barkley

    “The American romance with the shingle style has lasted nearly 150 years because it presents, in an understated way, the best of everything. For our firm, it is a spur to creativity, to unorthodox speculation, to finding new answers to old questions, and to opening one’s mind and imagination as well as one’s eyes.”

    15.Shingle249.IKBA_RI_S13_162,5
    A modern and elegant flow of space: Interiors of a project by architectural firm Ike Kligerman Barkley
    Pollack Residence, Ct.; Mark Hampton Inc. Interiors/ Ike Kligerman Barclay, Architects
    Pollack Residence, Ct.; Mark Hampton Inc. Interiors/ Ike Kligerman Barkley

    FUN FACTS: Shingle-style houses often use a single, large roof, such as a gambrel or hip roof. The houses thus emanate a more pronounced mass and a greater emphasis on horizontality. The New Shingled House by Ike, Kligerman, Barkley is published by The Monacelli Press.

    IKB TNSH Book Cover_JPEG
    A great read: The New Shingled House by Ike, Kligerman, & Barkley

    Picture credit: William Waldron. All rights reserved

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  • Architecture,  Art,  Design,  Features,  Interior Design

    How did Frank Lloyd Wright connect art and nature together?

    / Comments Off on How did Frank Lloyd Wright connect art and nature together?

    When you think about the amount of Frank Lloyd Wright’s original masterpieces that have been destroyed over the years, design lovers who are looking for a “new beginning” to an old Wright design will rejoice when November comes around. How’s so? Well, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is getting ready to open the newly reconstructed Frank Lloyd Wright’s Bachman-Wilson House on the museum grounds. Adjacent to the museum’s south entrance, the house will open to the public on November 11, 2015.

    Designed in 1954 for Gloria and Abraham Wilson, the house was originally built along the Millstone River in New Jersey. However, in 1988, it was subsequently purchased by architect/designer team Lawrence and Sharon Tarantino. Threatened by repeated flooding from the river, the Tarantinos determined that relocating the house was the best option for its preservation. After a multi-year search for a suitable place, Crystal Bridges acquired the house in 2013.

    “I’d like to have a free architecture. I’d like to have architecture that belonged where you see it standing, and was a grace to the landscape instead of a disgrace.” – Frank Lloyd Wright

    The Frank Lloyd Wright house was disassembled piece by piece and transported 1,200 miles, arriving to the museum in the spring of 2014 where site work was already underway. Reconstruction began in the fall of 2014, led by Scott Eccleston, Crystal Bridges’ Director of Operations, Ron Shelby, architect with Hight Jackson Associates, and Bill Faber with Bill Faber Construction.

    Front exterior Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Back exterior Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Living space Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Living space to foyer Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Dining Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Master Bedroom Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Upstairs Bedroom Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography
    Guest Bedroom/Study Bachman-Wilson House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Courtesy Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Photos by Nancy Nolan Photography

    “The goal for reconstruction was to create an authentic experience by integrating the house into the natural landscape so it feels like it has always been here. For visitors, whether they are Frank Lloyd Wright experts or architectural novices, we want them to be transported by the architecture,” said Crystal Bridges Chief Engagement Officer Niki Stewart. “We put great effort into upholding Frank Lloyd Wright’s design principles — he believed in connecting physically and spiritually to the natural world through the use of horizontal lines that ground the structure into the landscape and dissolve the barrier between the interior and exterior.”

    Frank Lloyd Wright House Hours:
    Monday: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
    Wednesday, Thursday, & Friday: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.

    Saturday & Sunday: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
    Tuesday: Closed

    Reservations are required and tickets will be available on November 2, at no cost. Preview tickets are now available to Crystal Bridges’ members.

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    November 2, 2015

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    April 4, 2016

High End Weekly by Vyna St Phard

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