Walter Burley Griffin, Unidentified incinerator, Australia, c1930 |
My last blog, on the projected restoration of the Martin
House landscape, brought a veritable deluge of information and some
well-informed disagreement with my speculation that Wright may have fired
Walter Burley Griffin because he (Wright) did not like Griffin’s floricycle.
The fusillade (a shot heard around the world – literally) came from Christopher
Vernon, Professor of landscape design at the University of Western Australia in
Perth, and he should know. Currently at work on a book on Walter Burley Griffin,
Chris is the author of numerous articles on the leading American landscape
architects Griffin, Jens Jensen, and Wilhelm Miller, many of whom knew or
worked for Frank Lloyd Wright at various times. In Chris’s estimation Griffin
designed the Martin landscape, Wright approved of the design, and it should be
the basis for any restoration. He points out that Griffin left Wright’s office
primarily because he won the substantial commission to design the landscape for
what is now Northern Illinois University at Dekalb in 1906. Griffin was outgrowing his role in
Wright’s office just as Wright had outgrown Louis Sullivan but he remains
somewhat underappreciated in the United States because he left for Australia in
1912 where he, and his talented wife, Marion Mahoney Griffin, enjoyed splendid
careers before moving on to India to work. Griffin’s Australian work begins in
a Wrightian vein but is transformed in the 1920s (see picture) into an exuberance reminiscent of Bruce Goff. It turns out that Griffin took a substantial
record of his work for Wright, including 1907 Fuermann photographs of the
Martin, Barton, and Heath houses in Buffalo, a drawing of the Larkin Building, garden
plans, and numerous photographs of his independent work in the United States, which
now reside in the National Library of Australia. http://www.nla.gov.au/apps/cdview/?pi=nla.pic-vn3944294.
Christopher Vernon notes that Griffin returned to the United
States for a visit in 1932 and made a special visit to the Martin House that he
recorded photographically – additional proof that the landscape was largely
his. Hopefully Christopher Vernon will also make a return visit.