Sachs Covered Bridge; Adams County, PA

Sachs Covered Bridge; Adams County, PA
Sachs Covered Bridge; Adams County, PA

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Reading together

"The whole life of the average house, it seems, is a sort of indigestion." Frank Lloyd Wright, "Chapter 4--The Cardboard HouseModern Architecture, Being the Kahn Lectures for 1930, page 65

I recently came across a wonderful description in a guidebook about Frank Lloyd Wright buildings in the western US. It's in the section on the Hanna or Honeycomb House at Stanford.

"Jean and Paul Hanna both grew up in Minnesota. Married in 1926, they had three children. When they were both teaching at Columbia, between 1925 and 1935, they came across a review of Wright's Princeton lectures of 1930. They subsequently bought the book of them, Modern Architecture, Being the Kahn Lectures for 1930, and sat up all night reading it to each other. They were so taken with it that they wrote to Wright, and met him in Taliesin the following summer on a trip to Minnesota." From Heinz, Thomas  A. 1999. Frank Lloyd Wright Field Guide: West, Volume 3, page 33

It goes on to describe the process they went through to work with Wright to build a house at Stanford, where they re-settled in 1935.

I post on here about Wright buildings not because I'm enamored by his homes and want to live in one like them but because they are interesting, many are in the Madison and Chicago areas, and I'm attracted to his ideas on organic architecture. What I've been thinking about is how the couple became so enthusiastic together that they took turns reading to each other into the night and I guess breaks to talk about it. I wonder if they laughed together at the quote I put above and talked about what it meant. This kind of closeness is what I think is important in life.

Here's the first part of that paragraph starting Chapter 4:
"Any house is a far too complicated, clumsy, fussy, mechanical counterfeit of the human body. Electric wiring for nervous system, plumbing for bowels, heating system and fireplaces for arteries and heart, and windows for eyes, nose, and lungs generally. The structure of the house, too, is a kind of cellular tissue stuck full of bone, complex now, as the confusion of Bedlam and all beside. The whole interior is a kind of stomach that attempts to digest objects--objects, 'objects d'art' maybe, but objects always. There the affected affliction sits, ever hungry--for more objects--or plethoric with over plenty. The whole life of the average house, it seems, is a sort of indigestion."

Paul Hanna was a leading figure on elementary school education and the Social Studies Editor for World Book Encyclopedia for 35 years. [More on him  in "Paul Hanna at Stanford University"] Jean Hanna was also an expert on childhood education, but I haven't found much yet on her career.