Bringing Russel Wright into Your Home:
Taking Inspiration from Wright’s Modernist Country Retreat, Manitoga BY SHARON P. CROCKETT
Many Americans’ first encounter with the designer Russel Wright in the last century might have come when they first admired his Depression-era simple wooden furniture, brandnamed American Modern, or spotted his iconic organic forms of dinnerware, cutlery, glassware and table linens or perhaps when they saw an in-store display of his unbreakable Iroquois Casual China. His signature was a relaxed informality that was modern, democratic and individualistic. Today we may know of him from remembering our grandmother’s table settings, elements of which are now collected and proudly displayed as sculptural artifacts of a past era. But Wright was much more than merely an arbiter of mid20th century American middle-class domestic taste. Wright’s design ideas ranged far beyond the domestic table to domestic interiors more broadly. The weekend sanctuary in Garrison, New York that he moved into in 1961 on property he named Manitoga (Algonquin for “place of great spirit”)
reflects the culmination of an evolution of his larger ideas about casual living in harmony with nature. It can still inspire us today as we think about ways of designing our contemporary interiors. In some ways, Wright was ahead of his time, anticipating do-it-yourself and sustainable design concepts even as he embraced the use of post-war man-made materials. He created interior spaces that reflected his ideas about the importance of both organic and synthetic materials and forms, the influence of the change in seasons, the beauty of the hand-made, the different moods that lighting effects can create and his proclivity for Asian decorative arts. These are in many ways timeless concerns, but many were fresh for their time – the 1940’s through the 1960’s – and continue to resonate today. Nature: water, stone, fire and wood The landscape surrounding the abandoned quarry on the land on which Wright built his “experiment”, as he liked to describe his modernist weekend home designed with the help of the architect David Leavitt, was first and foremost a source of inspiration for Wright. One of the first things you notice as you approach Manitoga is the sound of falling water. Wright did admire Frank Lloyd Wright’s modern masterpiece, Falling Water, and either consciously or unconsciously incorporated some of its elements into his own house. Russel Wright manipulated the existing landscape to divert a stream that would then fall over rocks into the quarry to create a pond. His bedroom/studio directly overlooks this 30-foot waterfall, and he often left his windows and doors open so that he could better hear its music. The large, floorto-ceiling glass sliding doors that line the southern walls of the living room and dining room frame views of the trees along the ridge just past the waterfall behind the quarry pond. Transparent colored netting, ribbons or string were Wright’s solutions for window dressings so as not to detract from the views. Wright was interested in natural sounds, such as that of the waterfall he created, and about framing views of the surrounding landscape. In your own home, something as simple as a tabletop fountain in a den or study or wind chime hung near a door or window can create a tranquil soundscape. In fact, Wright placed a wind chime in the ceiling of the hallway near his daughter’s bedroom in which breezes blew through a nearby window.
Summer Dining Room (circa 1965)
If your home is lucky enough to feature appealing outdoor views, by minimally dressing the windows that frame those
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