Has there ever been a more polarising movement across architecture and design than Postmodernism?
Colourful, experimental, even fun: for some it represented a return to meaning, a quest for the beauty modernism had framed as superfluous. For others, it was simply vulgar and populist.
Postmodernism was conceived in the US in the mid-twentieth century as a response to the perceived failings of residential modernity and, by the 1980s, extravagantly ornate public and commercial PoMo buildings could be found in cities across the world. It soon fell out of favour, but now, some 30 years later, contemporary practices such as MVRDV and Ordinary Architecture are stimulating something of a revival.
Here we present some of the best original PoMo homes currently on the market, and a contemporary work from one of the movement’s greatest proponents.
17 Beech Street, Montauk, NY
$1.95m via Sotheby’s
Sited on the East Hamptons shoreline, this sprawling family home (1968) by Robert A M Stern is set in 1.3 acres of green space, and boasts four private terraces and a roof deck: all the better for spying on New York’s movers and shakers as they indulge in a bit of down time (yeah right – they don’t do downtime).
Photography: Chris Foster
17 Beech Street, Montauk, NY
$1.95m via Sotheby’s
Sited on the East Hamptons shoreline, this sprawling family home (1968) by Robert A M Stern is set in 1.3 acres of green space, and boasts four private terraces and a roof deck: all the better for spying on New York’s movers and shakers as they indulge in a bit of down time (yeah right – they don’t do downtime).
Photography: Chris Foster
17 Beech Street, Montauk, NY
$1.95m via Sotheby’s
Sited on the East Hamptons shoreline, this sprawling family home (1968) by Robert A M Stern is set in 1.3 acres of green space, and boasts four private terraces and a roof deck: all the better for spying on New York’s movers and shakers as they indulge in a bit of down time (yeah right – they don’t do downtime).
Photography: Chris Foster
17 Beech Street, Montauk, NY
$1.95m via Sotheby’s
Sited on the East Hamptons shoreline, this sprawling family home (1968) by Robert A M Stern is set in 1.3 acres of green space, and boasts four private terraces and a roof deck: all the better for spying on New York’s movers and shakers as they indulge in a bit of down time (yeah right – they don’t do downtime).
Photography: Chris Foster
Vanna Venturi House, 8330 Millman Street, Philadelphia, USA
$1.75m via Kurfiss / Sotheby’s
Designed by ‘father of Postmodern architecture’ Robert Venturi for his mother, the Vanna Venturi House (1964) is widely considered to be the first PoMo building in the world. This three-bedroom, two-bathroom teal icon in the Chestnut Hill neighbourhood of Philadelphia was immortalised on a US postage stamp in 2005, and is on the market for the first time in 43 years.
Vanna Venturi House, 8330 Millman Street, Philadelphia, USA
$1.75m via Kurfiss / Sotheby’s
Designed by ‘father of Postmodern architecture’ Robert Venturi for his mother, the Vanna Venturi House (1964) is widely considered to be the first PoMo building in the world. This three-bedroom, two-bathroom teal icon in the Chestnut Hill neighbourhood of Philadelphia was immortalised on a US postage stamp in 2005, and is on the market for the first time in 43 years.
Vanna Venturi House, 8330 Millman Street, Philadelphia, USA
$1.75m via Kurfiss / Sotheby’s
Designed by ‘father of Postmodern architecture’ Robert Venturi for his mother, the Vanna Venturi House (1964) is widely considered to be the first PoMo building in the world. This three-bedroom, two-bathroom teal icon in the Chestnut Hill neighbourhood of Philadelphia was immortalised on a US postage stamp in 2005, and is on the market for the first time in 43 years.
Vanna Venturi House, 8330 Millman Street, Philadelphia, USA
$1.75m via Kurfiss / Sotheby’s
Designed by ‘father of Postmodern architecture’ Robert Venturi for his mother, the Vanna Venturi House (1964) is widely considered to be the first PoMo building in the world. This three-bedroom, two-bathroom teal icon in the Chestnut Hill neighbourhood of Philadelphia was immortalised on a US postage stamp in 2005, and is on the market for the first time in 43 years.
De Leuwte, Loenen, Holland
€4.6m via Pc22
This contemporary (2004) riverside villa in a small Dutch town to the southeast of Amsterdam is the work of late architect Michael Graves, one of the US’s foremost proponents of Postmodernism in the public sphere (Portland Building, Denver Public Library). At 8,000 square feet, it’s certainly no wallflower, but it manages to blend with its surroundings, while also standing apart.
Photography: Gijs de Jager (c)
De Leuwte, Loenen, Holland
€4.6m via Pc22
This contemporary (2004) riverside villa in a small Dutch town to the southeast of Amsterdam is the work of late architect Michael Graves, one of the US’s foremost proponents of Postmodernism in the public sphere (Portland Building, Denver Public Library). At 8,000 square feet, it’s certainly no wallflower, but it manages to blend with its surroundings, while also standing apart.
Photography: Gijs de Jager (c)
De Leuwte, Loenen, Holland
€4.6m via Pc22
This contemporary (2004) riverside villa in a small Dutch town to the southeast of Amsterdam is the work of late architect Michael Graves, one of the US’s foremost proponents of Postmodernism in the public sphere (Portland Building, Denver Public Library). At 8,000 square feet, it’s certainly no wallflower, but it manages to blend with its surroundings, while also standing apart.
Photography: Gijs de Jager (c)
De Leuwte, Loenen, Holland
€4.6m via Pc22
This contemporary (2004) riverside villa in a small Dutch town to the southeast of Amsterdam is the work of late architect Michael Graves, one of the US’s foremost proponents of Postmodernism in the public sphere (Portland Building, Denver Public Library). At 8,000 square feet, it’s certainly no wallflower, but it manages to blend with its surroundings, while also standing apart.
Photography: Gijs de Jager (c)
De Leuwte, Loenen, Holland
€4.6m via Pc22
This contemporary (2004) riverside villa in a small Dutch town to the southeast of Amsterdam is the work of late architect Michael Graves, one of the US’s foremost proponents of Postmodernism in the public sphere (Portland Building, Denver Public Library). At 8,000 square feet, it’s certainly no wallflower, but it manages to blend with its surroundings, while also standing apart.
Photography: Gijs de Jager (c)
De Leuwte, Loenen, Holland
€4.6m via Pc22
This contemporary (2004) riverside villa in a small Dutch town to the southeast of Amsterdam is the work of late architect Michael Graves, one of the US’s foremost proponents of Postmodernism in the public sphere (Portland Building, Denver Public Library). At 8,000 square feet, it’s certainly no wallflower, but it manages to blend with its surroundings, while also standing apart.
Photography: Gijs de Jager (c)
Pwllheli, Caernarfonshire, UK
£475,000 via HouseSimple
If Michael Graves left his Postmodern stamp on the US, then Sir Terry Farrell certainly has on the UK, particularly in London. The practice behind the M16 building, One Embankment Place, and the much-missed TVAM building travelled to northwest Wales to create this three-bedroom coastal property in 1982. It offers views of Cardigan Bay and Snowdonia National Park.
Pwllheli, Caernarfonshire, UK
£475,000 via HouseSimple
If Michael Graves left his Postmodern stamp on the US, then Sir Terry Farrell certainly has on the UK, particularly in London. The practice behind the M16 building, One Embankment Place, and the much-missed TVAM building travelled to northwest Wales to create this three-bedroom coastal property in 1982. It offers views of Cardigan Bay and Snowdonia National Park.
1249 W. Dickens, Chicago, USA
$1.8m via Dream Town Realty
The affluent Lincoln Park neighbourhood on the north side of Chicago is peppered with curious PoMo homes. Constructed in 1996, this three-bedroom, bright white space oddity is probably the pick of the bunch. It recently underwent a major interior renovation.
1249 W. Dickens, Chicago, USA
$1.8m via Dream Town Realty
The affluent Lincoln Park neighbourhood on the north side of Chicago is peppered with curious PoMo homes. Constructed in 1996, this three-bedroom, bright white space oddity is probably the pick of the bunch. It recently underwent a major interior renovation.
1249 W. Dickens, Chicago, USA
$1.8m via Dream Town Realty
The affluent Lincoln Park neighbourhood on the north side of Chicago is peppered with curious PoMo homes. Constructed in 1996, this three-bedroom, bright white space oddity is probably the pick of the bunch. It recently underwent a major interior renovation.
1249 W. Dickens, Chicago, USA
$1.8m via Dream Town Realty
The affluent Lincoln Park neighbourhood on the north side of Chicago is peppered with curious PoMo homes. Constructed in 1996, this three-bedroom, bright white space oddity is probably the pick of the bunch. It recently underwent a major interior renovation.