The Philip Johnson Complex at New Canaan Connecticut--Introduction and Index







Introduction



Philip Johnson acquired a five acre property here in 1946, which was eventually expanded to 47 acres with many more structures than the two original ones--the most famous, what came to be known as the Glass House--and the neighboring Brick House. The landscape is a crucial part of the complex with the Glass House situated prominently on a hill as a kind of transparent pavilion to view the surroundings. The Glass House may be the best known modern house in the world but it's not really a single house but a complex designed over several decades. Peter Blake calls it "a kind of Living Museum of Modern Architecture; it contains first-rate examples of everything from Schinkel Revival to Miesian perfection to Paul Rudolph's exercises in concrete-block construction" 32-4). The Glass House, a perfect example of the International Style, was Johnson's residence from 1949 until his death in 2005.

Index
108 images




Exterior of the Glass House
15 images
Interior of the Glass House
2 pages--21 images
Brick House and Lake Pavilion
11 images
Painting Gallery
13 images
Sculpture Gallery
2 pages--25 images
Other buildings and large outdoor sculpture
10 images
Da Monsta
13 images

Works Consulted or Quoted:
Peter Blake, Philip Johnson. Basel: Birkhüser Verlag, 1996.

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© 2014 Mary Ann Sullivan. I have photographed (on site), scanned, and manipulated all the images on these pages. Please feel free to use them for personal or educational purposes. They are not available for commercial purposes.