Architecture

Mabel Birkhead D'Amico
,
Victor D'Amico
Mabel and Victor D’Amico were pioneering spirits whose lives are remembered by the significant impact they made in the field of modern art education. An expression of their combined creativity, the D’Amico House holds an extensive collection of research material and original artworks that documents their contributions. The Art Barge, a summer art school created in 1960 from a retired WWII Navy barge, inspires individuals of all ages to discover their power to create.
Dorothy Riester
The Hilltop House and Studio at Stone Quarry Hill Art Park is the artist-built home and studio of artist, author, and preservationist Dorothy Riester and her husband Robert Riester. Stone Quarry stewards the Riester’s story to nurture and inspire in others an appreciation for modern architecture and design, and a reverence for the ever-changing relationship between art and nature.  Stone Quarry Hill Art Park encompasses 104 acres, including the original 23 acreage of the home and studio site.
Saarinen HouseBloomfield Hills, MI
Wallace Mitchell
,
Eero Saarinen
,
Eliel Saarinen
,
Loja Saarinen
,
Zoltan Sepeshy
,
Roy Slade
,
Pipsan Saarinen Swanson
Saarinen House served as the home, studio, and garden of the Finnish American Saarinen family, including architect, designer, and painter Eliel Saarinen, and weaver and designer Loja Saarinen. Completed in 1930, it is a unique example of a Modern, Art Deco-style domestic space realized through Arts and Crafts methodologies.
John F. Peto Studio MuseumIsland Heights, NJ
John Frederick Peto
This is the home and studio of John Frederick Peto, the nineteenth century still–life painter and master of the trompe l’oeil style. Following a multi-year preservation project completed in 2011, the Peto-designed house, studio, and gardens are now presented as they looked during his lifetime. Visitors can compare the very furniture and artifacts that Peto owned with the paintings and photographs in which they appear.
Judd FoundationNew York, NY
Donald Clarence Judd
From 1968 until his death in 1994, the sculptor Donald Judd used this 1870 cast-iron loft building as his home and studio. Here he had the opportunity to demonstrate his ideas about art installation. Judd’s use of the building is seen as part of the rise of the SoHo artistic community in New York City.