| Sacred
Spaces
The Architecture of Fay Jones
Written and produced by Larry Foley and Dale Carpenter
Chronicles the life of the great architect
'Sacred
Spaces' to Receive Best of Festival Award
“Jones has, more than any other Wright disciple, fulfilled
Wright’s wish, contributing to an architecture with
‘forms of his own devising.’”
—Robert Ivy, Editor-in-chief, Architectural
Record
Fay Jones of Fayetteville, Arkansas, studied under the great
Frank Lloyd Wright, and eventually ascended to heights rivaling
his master. Jones became one of the most acclaimed and significant
architects of the late twentieth century. He won the prestigious
AIA Gold Medal in 1990, awarded for a lifetime of work that
included his masterpiece, Thorncrown Chapel, a “little
glass chapel” near the quaint village of Eureka Springs,
Arkansas. The Chapel was recognized in 2000 by the AIA as
the fourth most significant structure of the twentieth century.
Sacred Spaces is a one-hour documentary film produced
by the Emmy Award winning documentary film team of Larry Foley
and Dale Carpenter, both professors of Journalism at the University
of Arkansas, the same school where Jones worked for much of
his distinguished career as an academician and practicing
architect. Emmy Award winner Kevin Croxton composed the musical
score.
Jones
was among the most successful Frank Lloyd Wright acolytes,
having lived and worked at Taliesin in 1953 but subsequently
finding his own architectural voice. Fay Jones died in 2004
at the age of 83, and is survived by his wife, Elizabeth “Gus”
Jones, and two daughters, all featured in the documentary
film. Bonus features include presentations about Jones’s
work by Robert Ivy, Robert McCarter, and Roy Reed. In 2009,
the University of Arkansas dedicated the Fay Jones School
of Architecture, in honor of its most famous graduate and
faculty member.

January
$19.95 DVD 60 minutes
ISBN 978-1-55728-938-4 |