is rather difficult to outline Gurdjieff’s teachings as a whole, not least because he himself was not exactly systematic as a teacher, but also because he was something of a trickster and raconteur who was entirely capable of salting truth with what we may charitably call jokes. But at heart is the idea, common to many esoteric traditions, that humanity is for the most part “asleep” and needs to be awakened. This awakening of others is best encouraged by someone who himself is already “awake,” and Gurdjieff and his disciples certainly saw him as having precisely that function of awakening. He is notorious for his confrontational style, for his ordering disciples to do humiliating or painful work, for his sometimes apparently erratic behavior—in short, for his playing the role of the peremptory and all-knowing guru. He did leave a real legacy in the West, no doubt of that, one with a powerful impact on the arts, not only in the dances supervised by Jeanne de Salzmann, his official successor, but also in popular music and the other fine arts.34 Yet Gurdjieff’s influence often remains hidden, for the groups he inspired do not operate publicly—they remain, in the strictest sense of the word, esoteric. One lesser-known example of Gurdjieff’s influence is to be found in Taliesin, the school of architecture founded by Frank Lloyd Wright—whose third wife, Olgivanna, had been a dancer at Gurdjieff’s school in Paris. Gurdjieff himself visited Wright at Taliesin in 1934.35