because I am an architecture nerd, I enjoy the fact that Brad Pitt is also an architecture nerd. Apparently his birthday gift from Angelina was a private tour of Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater, which for an architecture nerd is basically the best gift ever. And I fully confess to having much love for the Angie, but seriously, what a sweet, thoughtful, meaningful gift! I've been there and it's absolutely spectacular. One of those buildings that really gets to the heart of what great architecture can be. Anyway...
Brangelina In Town For Pitt’s Secret Birthday Present
The workers at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater got quite a surprise Thursday afternoon when Brad Pitt and Angelia Jolie showed up for a tour of the estate.
According to a spokesman for Fallingwater, Pitt and Jolie arrived just before 3 p.m. for the tour, Jolie’s gift to Pitt for his birthday.
“Brad said he had wanted to experience Fallingwater ever since he took an architectural history course in college,” Fallingwater’s curator of education Cara Armstrong said. “He and I talked quite a bit about design and art. He was incredibly well-informed about architecture.”
The couple took a two-hour private focused tour, led by Armstrong, who described the couple as “very gracious and very engaged in the house.”
“Brad said he had a visual sense of Fallingwater but experiencing it in person, hearing the sound of the waterfall cascading under the house and smelling the wood from the fireplace was better than anything he could have imagined,” Armstrong said.
After the tour, Jolie had arranged to have champagne and caviar sent in, which the couple shared in a private birthday celebration in Fallingwater’s living room. Afterward, they invited the staff to join them and encouraged them to take the “snacks” home.
Arrangements for the visit began about a week before Thanksgiving when staff at Fallingwater received a call from Jolie’s personal assistant in Asia.
Wow! What a nice thing to do. I don't particularly like her, but they seem very happy together and not weird like TomKat. I guess that's really all you can hope for from celebs - right?
jacks435 - I like them together too - I always thought Jen was an odd mate for him to chose.
I love Frank Lloyd Wright designs and love Fallingwater too! Could you imagine having been one of the Kaufmanns and having that as your summer cottage? I especially love the use of cantilevers in his designs - I even designed a cantilever table inspired by Wright that ended up being shown at NeoCon.
D--I like them together too (obviously.) He's not one of the actors I find particularly attractive, but he seems like a very interesting and intelligent person. And her I just love.
And that Usonian house is incredible. What's amusing to me, though, is that the man couldn't design furniture, or at least chairs at any rate, to save his life (unless you know of some things I haven't seen). The pieces are beautiful to look at, but they amuse me because they bear no relationship whatsoever to the human body. It's interesting to me that someone with such prodigious talent would be so fixated on his ideas of volume and form that he would fail to account for something as basic as function.
admittedly, i know nothing about architecture, but i was clicking through that usonian link. there's a hallway with a clearance space of four feet? wth? is there a particular reason for this?
sephorablue - that's a really interesting observation. considering he designed so many homes to be an extension of the land, you would think his furniture would be an extension of the body, but there are absolutely no ergonomics. He was very full of himself and maybe it was another way to let his clients know who is boss? I mean, it was pretty much take it or leave it with his designs or a big fight would ensue. For example, the Penfield house (the one squishy is referring to in regard to hallway width); his response to 6'8" Penfield was that he would just design a machine to insert him into the house horizontally. Wright endeavored to create continuous lines like Rietveld, as well as a tension between shapes. Since he had to compromise his typical low lying horizontal designs (Wright was very short and designed for his body) he then extended the continuous line vertically vs. horizontally to accommodate his client. So there may have been some rare accommodation to the dwellers of the home, but it is obvious that didn't carry through in his furniture designs. Actually, his home designs were not very structurally sound, although he did make engineering advances in architecture through the risks he took.
-- Edited by D at 14:31, 2006-12-12
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D wrote: Actually, his home designs were not very structurally sound, although he did make engineering advances in architecture through the risks he took.
-- Edited by D at 14:31, 2006-12-12
Interesting that you say that--when I went to Fallingwater a few years ago, they were just finishing up a major structural overhaul of the cantilevers because they were all sagging by a few inches. Apparently he hadn't calculated the load properly.
One of my dec arts prof's favorite stories was about Wright being such a megalomaniac that he actually designed some dresses for a client's wife to wear in the house.