Built in 1932 by artist Ezra Winter in Falls River, CT, the home/studio measures 8,230-square-feet with 11 rooms including four bedrooms and four baths built on four levels. |
Photo credit: Klemm Real Estate
FALLS VILLAGE, CT -- As wealthier Americans in
the early 1900s were building fancy homes: Victorians, Tudors, Gothic,
Mediterranean and Dutch Colonials, a new home trend was beginning in the 1930s
that was much less ornate and cleaner lines such as ranch and modernist homes.
Ezra Winter (Courtesy: Smithsonian American Art Museum) |
Built in 1932 by artist Ezra Winter,
famous for his murals of The Canterbury Tales in the Library of Congress and
Fountain of Youth in Radio City Music Hall, Winterhouse was his home and studio
until his death in 1949.
Several notable artists bought the home after
Winter's death to use as their own work and residence. The home is now for sale
priced at $3.95 million.
Attracted by the state’s green space and
proximity to New York City, a number of promising-young home designers and
builders moved to Connecticut in the 1940s including five newly graduated
Harvard architecture students who came to be known as The Harvard Five.
Eliot Noyes, Philip Johnson, Landis Gores,
John Johansen and their teacher Marcel Breuer built homes for themselves and clients
in Connecticut with modern design that flew in the face of the popular
Victorian gingerbread and clapboard Colonials.
Eliot Noyes (Courtesy: Wikipedia) |
Between the 1940s and ‘90s, about 100 modern and
mid-century-modern homes were built in New Canaan, Connecticut including Philip
Johnson’s famous Glass House and Eliot Noyes’ Noyes
House.
More than a decade before The Harvard Five,
Ezra Winter had built his own modernist home on 92 acres in Falls Village,
Connecticut, his home/studio measuring 8,230-square-feet with eleven rooms
including four bedrooms and four baths built on four levels.
Though the integrity of the design has stayed
in place, current updates have been made bringing 21st-century convenience and
style such as the state-of-the-art kitchen and adding a two-bay garage and
workroom in 2006.
Philip Johnson |
The studio has a 29-foot ceiling with northern
exposure and there is a private guest suite on the lower level. Grounds
around the house include stone walls, stone fire pit, herb and perennial
gardens and an insulated-and-heated storage building.
The acreage includes hiking trails, streams
and natural waterfalls.
Landis Gores |
Originally known as Juniper Hill, Winter’s
home was later owned by noted children’s book illustrator Dorothy Lathrop
and her sister Gertrude, a sculptor.
By the late 1990s, the home was known
as Winterhouse and was owned by William Drenttel who created the
original design for The New Republic and Spy magazines.
One of America’s first modernist homes,
Winterhouse, the creation of famed muralist Ezra Winter, is now for sale.
Priced at $3.95 million, it is listed by Graham Klemm of Klemm Real
Estate, Washington Depot, Connecticut.
CONTACT:
Genelle C. Brown
Content Manager, Media Division
TopTenRealEstateDeals.com
Phone: 434-480-4504
Twitter: @toptenrealestat
facebook.com/toptenrealestat
Content Manager, Media Division
TopTenRealEstateDeals.com
Phone: 434-480-4504
Twitter: @toptenrealestat
facebook.com/toptenrealestat
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