forced concrete almost as a sculptor might use resilient clay, Wright,
who often described his architecture as “organic,” designed a struc-
ture inspired by the spiral of a snail’s shell. Wright had introduced
curves and circles into some of his plans in the 1930s, and, as the ar-
chitectural historian Peter Blake noted, “The spiral was the next logi-
cal step; it is the circle brought into the third and fourth dimen-
sions.”^32 Inside the building (FIGS. 36-1and 36-85), the shape of the
shell expands toward the top, and a winding interior ramp spirals to
connect the gallery bays. A skylight strip embedded in the museum’s
outer wall provides illumination to the ramp, which visitors can stroll
up (or down, if they first take an elevator to the top of the building),
viewing the artworks displayed along the gently sloping pathway.
Thick walls and the solid organic shape give the building, outside and
inside, the sense of turning in on itself, and the long interior viewing
area opening onto a 90-foot central well of space creates a sheltered
environment, secure from the bustling city outside.36-55Frank Lloyd
Wright,Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum
(looking north), New
York, 1943–1959.
Using reinforced
concrete almost as a
sculptor might use
resilient clay, Wright
designed a snail shell–
shaped museum with
a winding interior ramp
for the display of art-
works along its gently
inclined path (FIGS. 36-1
and 36-85).MAP36-1Modernist and postmodernist architecture in Europe and America.0 1000 2000 miles
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