TALIESIN

  • Frank Lloyd Wright
  • 5481 County Rd C, Spring Green, WI 53588

Taliesin is Frank Lloyd Wright's home, studio, school, and agricultural estate located in the hills of Spring Green, Wisconsin. Wright began building the first Taliesin in 1911 on land that belonged to his Welsh ancestors. Wright sited the building along the brow of a hill rather than on its crest, allowing the structure to grow organically from the landscape.

Tragedy struck in August 1914 when a disturbed servant set fire to the living quarters and murdered seven people with an axe, including Wright's partner Mamah Borthwick Cheney and her two children. Wright immediately began rebuilding, completing Taliesin II by 1915. In 1925, faulty electrical wiring sparked another fire that destroyed the living quarters again. Wright rebuilt once more, creating Taliesin III, which stands today.

The Taliesin that visitors see was constructed and refined between 1925 and Wright's death in 1959. The complex includes Wright's residence, drafting studio, theater, farm buildings, and structures housing the Taliesin Fellowship, the architecture school Wright founded in 1932. Fellowship apprentices helped build and maintain Taliesin while studying under the master.

The buildings embody Wright's philosophy of organic architecture, constructed from local limestone, sand colored plaster, and wood. They nestle into the landscape with low horizontal lines and intimate connections between interior and exterior spaces. Wright continuously modified and expanded Taliesin throughout his life, treating it as a living laboratory for his architectural ideas.

After Wright's death in 1959, his third wife Olgivanna continued operating the Taliesin Fellowship until her death in 1985. The Taliesin residence was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019 as part of The 20th Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright. The estate is open for tours from May through October.