![]() ![]() ![]() It will certainly have become clear by, when we learn that the mystic Georgi Gurdjieff, a Svengali of sorts for Wright’s third wife, Olgivanna, possessed a “feline yet powerful body” and eyes that “could penetrate one’s psyche” and “bring a woman to orgasm from across a room.” ![]() Maybe it will happen on, when the authors describe the teenage Wright daydreaming about sex, drifting into his “moist dream space.” Or on, when they write that the young architect was so entranced watching his mentor Louis Sullivan at the drafting table - “the languid lines coursing through his ornamental detailing” - that he became “ashamed by his own pleasure.” IT won’t take long for readers of “The Fellowship,” an ambitious new study of Frank Lloyd Wright by Roger Friedland and Harold Zellman, to realize that the book is no ordinary exercise in architectural history. ![]()
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