ere I do not forget Bmno Zevi's Towards an Organic Architecture,
of 1950, which was consciously written as a reply to Le
Corbusier. One cannot, however, regard it as a complement to
the other or as an advance upon it, since it was hardly more than
a reaction against it in favor of "organic" principles which had
been formulated by architects other than Zevi and had indeed
passed their peak of vitality long before. They had found their
best embodiment in the work of Frank Lloyd Wright before 1914
and their clearest verbal statement in his writings of that period