Frank Lloyd Wright, like many architects of his era, conceived of his buildings as total works of art. And so he was as fastidious about what went inside of his projects as he was about the structure itself. (To wit: When a ceramic pot was too big for its window-adjacent shelf at Taliesin West, he cut the glass to accommodate its width.) This often meant that he designed custom furniture, textiles, stained glass, and lighting to maintain a continuous throughline in his spaces. Still,...
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