Art Makes Lives Better
11 SEPTEMBER 2023 - 27 SEPTEMBER 2023Notes
John Penn (1921-2007) was a modernist architect and painter of abstract art, who spent the bulk of his working life designing houses and making paintings in Suffolk. Born in Northamptonshire in 1921, Penn had a grand upbringing, attending Eton before studying history, and then architecture, at Trinity College Cambridge. His architectural education was interrupted during the Second World War, when he served in the armed forces, and he did not graduate until the 1950s. Penn moved to the US shortly after graduating, where he worked with Richard Neutra in Los Angeles, and later with SOM in New York, before moving back to Britain to settle in Suffolk. Architectural historian Richard Gray thinks Penn's most renowned works are his nine houses in Suffolk, all with flat roofs. Gray said: 'Penn never gained much publicity, as it wasn't really there at the time. He was strongly influenced by Mies van der Rohe, and was one of few people at the time who applied the Classical design of Roman villas, with their symmetry and formality, to Modernist design.' An exhibition displaying Penn's architectural work and painting was shown at Margaret Howell Gallery in London's Wigmore Street, in 2007.
Artwork in good condition. Sold in blue wooden frame.